Classification: Two-year public college or university;
Hispanic-Serving Institution.
Modules Used:
- Module 1: Get a Grip on Your Finances: Smart Spending for Students.
- Module 2: Seek out Financial Aid: Funding Resources and Financial
Obligations.
- Module 3: Work Hard but Smart: How to Be Successful in School and Graduate
on Time.
- Module 4: Take Control of Your Future: Finishing School and Repaying Your
Loans.
- Module 5: Now That You Are About to Graduate: Taking Control of Your Life.
How Used: Student-services workshops.
Program Description: Improving student retention was the
driving force behind the decision to implement USA Funds® Life
Skills® at EMCC. In response to invitations to assess the interest of
all student-services professionals in the program, counselors, learning-support
staff, the student-success coordinator and financial-aid professionals
participated in training to deliver the program.
Subsequently, campus staff elected to offer the modules as workshops that
would be open to all students. Recruitment for the workshops is accomplished
through advertising and word of mouth. Students who failed to make satisfactory
academic progress during their first year are required to enroll in workshops
recommended to them by the appeals committee. The appeals committee often
recommends budgeting, study skills or career planning for these students. Each
workshop session lasts approximately one hour.
In addition, USA Funds Life Skills is used with two high-school outreach
programs. In one program, a career teacher at a charter high school uses the
materials with her students. In the other program, USA Funds Life Skills
materials are delivered by staff at an alternative high school on the EMCC
campus.
Staffing Requirements: Professional staff from the
student-services division delivers Modules 1-5 as workshops.
Recommendations: The associate dean of students emphasizes
that a team approach is necessary for successful implementation of USA Funds
Life Skills. For example, the involvement of the counseling staff is extremely
important in the delivery of the program. She suggests structuring a workshop
around specific student needs. For example, students who don't have a career
path when they arrive at EMCC tend to be less successful, so developing a career
workshop around one of the USA Funds Life Skills modules made sense for EMCC.
The senior associate dean of student services indicated that the program holds
great promise for students who fail to make satisfactory progress during their
first year.
Campus Contact:
Lauren Shellenbarger, Senior Associate
Dean of Student Services
Phone: (623) 935-8808
E-mail: lauren.shellenbarger@emcmail.maricopa.edu