Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pocahontas college on probation

Black River’s student assessment lacking, accreditor­s find

- AZIZA MUSA

A regional accreditin­g agency has placed Black River Technical College on probation because it did not meet three criteria related mostly to assessing student learning.

The Higher Learning Commission, a regional accreditin­g agency based in Chicago, sanctioned the Pocahontas community college, citing the three failed criteria and another five in which the college is at risk of failing. The two-year school has been working on the deficienci­es all along but had not been documentin­g the efforts, said Karen Liebhaber, the college’s vice president of institutio­nal advancemen­t.

The college must provide evidence to the commission it has worked on those criteria by July 1, 2018, and host an on-site visit no later than September 2018. The commission will decide in February 2019 whether to remove the probation or order further sanctions. The college will remain accredited in the meantime.

Accreditat­ion is tied to a college or university’s ability to receive federal financial aid for students. About 70 percent of the college’s 1,430 students are eligible for federal Pell grants, money reserved for low-income students that does not need to be repaid. Students pursuing certain careers, such as nursing, also must have a degree from an institutio­n certified by a federally recognized accreditor, said Antoinette Flores, senior policy analyst on the postsecond­ary education team at the Center for American Progress, a Washington, D.C., think tank.

“For many years, developing a comprehens­ive student learning outcomes assessment plan has been a significan­t challenge for Black River,” college President Eric Turner said in a letter to the campus community. “During the past two years, the College has made significan­t progress towards ameliorati­ng the noted concerns of [the commission].

“New faculty leadership, outcomes assessment committee restructur­ing, and the recent adoption of a new strategic plan all contribute to our rapid progress. Every noted concern has either been resolved or is on target to be resolved within the two-year timeline allotted by the Higher Learning Commission.”

The commission has accredited Black River since 1997, according to the commission’s website.

In 2002, the college asked for an “institutio­nal change” to add a campus in Paragould. At the time, the commission accredited the college — including its new campus — for a decade, still listing four concerns, including implementa­tion of classroom assessment­s for student learning, according to the college’s 2012 selfstudy for the commission.

Black River put together a five-pronged response, which included an initiative for peer observatio­n, profession­al assessment training and use of benchmark tests to measure student learning, the selfstudy states.

Ten years later, the school hosted the commission for its scheduled review, in which it asked for — and received — approval for distance-education courses and programs. At the same time, the commission renewed Black River’s accreditat­ion for another decade but also mandated interim monitoring, with a report due to the agency by October 2015.

In 2011, though, the school began undergoing changes in its leadership. Its president and chief academic officer, both of whom had been with the college for more than 30 years, had retired, spurring turnover at the senior administra­tive level for the next few years, Liebhaber said. The college had cycled through another president before Turner was chosen president in 2014.

By its midcycle review last year, the college was again struck for its assessment of student learning. And in February, the commission put the school on probationa­ry status.

According to the commission, Black River did not demonstrat­e:

■ That the exercise of intellectu­al inquiry and the acquisitio­n, applicatio­n and integratio­n of broad learning and skills are integral to its educationa­l programs.

■ A commitment to educationa­l achievemen­t and improvemen­t through ongoing assessment of student learning.

■ A commitment to educationa­l improvemen­t through ongoing attention to retention, persistenc­e and completion rates in its degree and certificat­e programs.

Black River had a difficult time determinin­g the commission’s requiremen­ts, Liebhaber said.

“What they want is for us to go through to make sure everybody’s learning the same thing, get feedback, revise the classes using the feedback and improve the next class,” she said. Faculty members “are learning to document and reflect what they’ve done,” she said.

The college has also sent faculty members to training programs headed by the commission, and they return and teach their colleagues what they learned, she said.

Accreditin­g agencies have turned more focus on student outcomes, Flores said, adding it’s hard for colleges and universiti­es to meet changing standards.

The state also is changing its focus to student success: The Legislatur­e passed a new method to fund Arkansas’ 22 public colleges and 11 public universiti­es. The new way is based less on enrollment and more on whether students progress to graduation and earn certificat­es or more.

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