Los Angeles Times

When Course 101 won’t add up

Critics say number jumble makes transfers difficult

- By Larry Gordon Gordon is a staff writer for EdSource, a nonprofit journalism website covering education in California.

At Pasadena City College, college algebra for STEM majors is labeled Math 003. At Cypress College, it’s Math 141-C and at Napa Valley, it’s Math 106. For anyone hoping to enroll in the same course at Oxnard College, look for Math R115.

Across California’s public community colleges, courses that basically cover the same material and are recognized as being interchang­eable in fulfilling requiremen­ts for majors and transfers are assigned different course numbers.

That process confuses community college students trying to transfer to a fouryear university, critics say. Students may not know whether they are taking the right courses and may inadverten­tly register to repeat a class if they take classes at more than one community college.

Proposals to develop a statewide common numbering system have been debated for nearly three decades. A shadow system already tries to identify similar courses at different colleges, but some say it’s not enough and not easily available to students.

A new effort is underway, however, to create a broad new numbering system that would be accessible and easily understand­able to all community college students and cover many more courses.

It would ensure that similar courses at any California community college are aligned so they fulfill the same transfer requiremen­ts for California State University and the University of California systems.

If California adopts the changes, it will join 17 states, including Arizona, Florida and Texas, that have or are developing common course numbers for their lower division courses usually taken in the first two years at public colleges and universiti­es, according to a survey by the Education Commission of the States.

A bill in the California Legislatur­e, AB 1111, would require the state’s 116 community colleges to adopt a common numbering system that would cover general education classes and those needed for transfer into various majors at universiti­es. The Assembly’s Higher Education Committee unanimousl­y approved the legislatio­n on April 22.

The idea to phase in a new common numbering system by 2025 was among the recommenda­tions of the recent Recovery with Equity report organized by Lande Ajose, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s senior policy advisor for higher education, and the Governor’s Council for PostSecond­ary Education.

Backers say the change is an important step to help improve the low transfer rates: Only 19% of community college students who say they intend to transfer to universiti­es do so within four years.

Faculty organizati­ons oppose the change, saying it will divert time and resources from much-needed reforms, such as better financial aid and ensuring students pass their classes, no matter the catalog numbers.

Those professors also criticize it for usurping the authority of the 73 districts that run the community colleges.

The bill’s author, Assemblyma­n Marc Berman (DMenlo Park), said the “current system is unnecessar­ily confusing for students and that the difference­s in course numbers can unintentio­nally set students back and create a barrier to timely transfer.”

Without a common course numbering system, he added, “students are struggling to transfer credits between institutio­ns and plan out a coherent road map to earning their degree.”

The Berman bill faces headwinds as it moves now to the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee.

The statewide community college Academic Senate recently approved a resolution to oppose AB 1111, saying it is not needed, would cost too much and “would create undue and unnecessar­y difficulti­es for colleges.”

Beyond the changes needed in informatio­n systems, schedules and transcript­s, more than 150,000 courses would have to be reviewed.

The Faculty Assn. of California Community Colleges also argues against the plan. FACCC’s president-elect, Wendy Brill-Wynkoop, said she does not think that the number of students taking wrong or repetitive classes is high enough to “warrant the insane amount of time, effort and money” that statewide course numbering would require.

Besides, she and others point to a system that already aims to help students and faculty choose and qualify courses for transfer. That system, called Course Identifica­tion Numbering or CID, works fairly well, they said, although critics said it is very limited in scope and adds another layer of bureaucrac­y.

With faculty review, C-ID has produced “descriptor­s” for about 400 types of lower division and transferab­le courses, detailing the material to be covered and sometimes the texts and amount of student work.

Community colleges send in their courses for review in hopes they will be approved and then assigned to one of those descriptor­s and its numbers in the background.

Nearly 22,000 community college classes now fit into one of the descriptor­s, but there are more than 150,000 courses across the system, officials said.

 ?? ACROSS Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? California’s public community colleges, including Los Angeles City College, classes that cover the same material can have different course numbers.
ACROSS Al Seib Los Angeles Times California’s public community colleges, including Los Angeles City College, classes that cover the same material can have different course numbers.

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