Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UACCB instructor selected as interstate passport facilitato­r

- BY HANNAH KELLER FLANERY UACCB Communicat­ions and Marketing Coordinato­r

BATESVILLE — In 2016, Beverly Meinzer, a chemistry and physical-science instructor at the University of Arkansas Community College at Batesville, attended a meeting in Boulder, Colorado, to learn about a new transfer initiative called Interstate Passport. The initiative is designed to help students transfer seamlessly between institutio­ns. Recently, Meinzer was selected to be the Arkansas state facilitato­r for Interstate Passport.

“I will be responsibl­e for helping grow the Interstate Passport network in the state and surroundin­g states by helping colleges implement Interstate Passport at their campuses and pointing them to resources available through the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education,” Meinzer said. “Interstate Passport is a great program. It helps students transfer, typically from a two-year to a four-year university, without losing credits and without having to retake classes they’ve already taken, which saves them time and money.

Students are able to complete their degrees faster or get into the workforce faster, whatever their path may be.”

Meinzer gave a presentati­on on Interstate Passport in October at the Arkansas Community College annual conference, along with Ann Clemmer, senior associate director for government relations/special projects with the Arkansas Department of Higher Education. “It was a very good experience. We were able to share informatio­n and get the word out about Interstate Passport,” Meinzer said.

UACCB is currently the only school in Arkansas that is an Interstate Passport institutio­n. The college has awarded passports to 62 students so far. According to the Interstate Passport website, “Interstate Passport addresses the frustratio­ns many students experience when transferri­ng between institutio­ns by articulati­ng to an agreed-upon set of general education learning outcomes that students must achieve. Member institutio­ns map these outcomes to their lower-division courses and learning experience­s.”

Meinzer said preliminar­y data shows that students with passports graduate quicker and have a higher grade-point average than those without the passports.

“Of the 472 students awarded passports in 2018-19, the average GPA was 3.48, she said, compared to an average GPA of 2.93 for students who transfer without a passport.”

She said students with a passport also typically have more credits than those who transfer without a passport.

In the spring semester, Meinzer will make contact with colleges and universiti­es in the state, as well as in a neighborin­g state, to help guide them through the process of implementi­ng Interstate Passport at their institutio­ns.

“It will be fairly simple for other institutio­ns to build their Interstate Passport block of courses because they can use UACCB’s block as a model, then find those courses at their institutio­n in the Arkansas Course Transfer System. The staff [at the commission] has also been very helpful, and there are lots of useful resources available to institutio­ns that want to implement Interstate Passport. It’s good for students, which means it’s good for colleges,” she said.

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