The Register-Guard

Group pushes to move to college corequisit­e model

- Tiffany Camhi OREGON PUBLIC BROADCASTI­NG

The first year of learning at a community college can be tough, especially for students who are deemed not academical­ly ready to take college-level English or math courses.

Traditiona­lly, these students often take a semester or two of prerequisi­te, remedial classes before enrolling in college-level courses. This developmen­tal learning practice is extremely common among two-year public institutio­ns, with as many as two-thirds of incoming community college students taking at least one remedial course, according to the U.S. Department of Education.

But some research suggests remedial courses can impede students and diminish the chances they’ll earn degrees, and advocates for Oregon’s community colleges are looking to make some big changes to developmen­tal learning in postsecond­ary schools.

At a House Higher Education Committee hearing in Salem this month, the Oregon Community College Associatio­n made the case for why the state’s 17 community colleges should make a shift to a “corequisit­e” learning model for math and writing. As the name suggests, this model allows students to take college-level courses right away while simultaneo­usly receiving remedial courses or other types of support, like tutoring. Advocates of corequisit­es say a switch to this model could lead to better student outcomes.

“It’s a model that works,” said OCCA deputy director John Wykoff at the hearing. “(Data shows) students who were taking a corequisit­e were performing — in most cases — better than their peers who placed into college-level courses.”

States that have moved to corequisit­e education have shown positive results for students. A study of Tennessee’s systemwide corequisit­e effort at its community colleges found students were more likely to pass both college-level math and English classes than with the prerequisi­te model. But the same study found that corequisit­es did not have much long-term effect on students completing degrees or transferri­ng to a

four-year college.

Advocates of corequisit­es said the traditiona­l prerequisi­te model is outdated and no longer benefits students. Research has shown students enrolled in prerequisi­te classes are more likely to drop out before even being eligible to take college-level classes.

In the upcoming 2024 legislativ­e session, OCCA said it will push for legislatio­n directing Oregon’s Higher Education Coordinati­ng Commission to start a workgroup tasked with making recommenda­tions on how the state’s community colleges can best transition to a corequisit­e model.

The group wouldn’t have to look far for examples already in place. More than half of Oregon’s community colleges are already experiment­ing with corequisit­e learning in math. Clatsop Community College is one of them. Jennifer Hughes, a second-year student at CCC, took a Math 105 corequisit­e course at the school. She credits the corequisit­e model for helping her pass it.

“I had not taken a math class in probably 20-some years,” said Hughes. “I believe my success was because of the extra help. It was a journey to learn math again.”

Data from 2022 and 2023 showed CCC students enrolled on the corequisit­e path were more likely to pass college-level math. Eighty-six percent of students taking Math 105 as a corequisit­e passed the class, compared to 75% taking the class alone.

OCCA said corequisit­es help students stay on track and graduate on time.

“I got to go straight into taking my required courses to get my degree,” said Hughes, who is now applying to CCC’s nursing program. “I think corequisit­es are a win-win for everybody.”

Quicker completion can also save students thousands of dollars in tuition as prerequisi­te classes could take several semesters to finish.

The corequisit­e model is particular­ly beneficial to students from marginaliz­ed communitie­s. BIPOC students, particular­ly Black and Latinx students, as well as low-income students are disproport­ionately placed in remedial courses. A study of the corequisit­e model at the University System of Georgia found that all students in this developmen­tal learning model, regardless of race, were able to complete gateway courses at similar rates.

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