THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

HLC's Final Component: Quality Initiative

HLC's Final Component: Quality Initiative

Story by Madi Bates, Graphic by Allie Hutto

Author: Bodine, James/Tuesday, December 10, 2013/Categories: Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Fort Lewis College’s Quality Initiative, the final component in the Higher Learning Commission’s accreditation, will be a degree tracking system to help students finish school in four years.

The degree tracking program is called U.Achieve Suite from College Source, which will be accessible through WebOPUS on April 1 for the 2013-2014 year’s academic catalog, said Beverly Chew, professor of psychology and team leader for the Quality Initiative.

“It’s no pun that it happens to be April Fools Day,” Chew said.

The push is to get the catalog ready for incoming freshman and transfer students. Several hour long training sessions will be held to get students using the program, she said. Additionally, five or six designated experts will be offering training periodically.

The team will then be working to get the previous two to three years’ catalogs as well, she said.

The program is replacing the WebCAPP tool in WebOPUS, Chew said. U.Achieve has a very user-friendly graphic interface that enables students to create a customized, semester by semester degree map using drag and drop technology.

The program can help flag prerequisites for classes and determine how many classes a student still needs to take, Chew said.

Finish in Four is a part of  a campus wide effort to help students graduate in four years, Chew said.

“Staying in school takes financial resources, so understanding when you can graduate is really important for students using debt financing for college,” Carol Smith, the associate vice president for Enrollment Management and cabinet liaison, said in an email.

Finish in Four is a program offered through the state, which allows students to sign a contract in which they pledge to finish their degree within four years, Chew said. When students does this, each department is required to offer the courses a student needs to follow their four year plan.

This four year graduation agreement is outlined in the Student Bill of Rights, which can be found under Academic Policies on the FLC website.

Interest in this program is at an all time high since a financial incentive was added to the program, Chew said. Now, students who enroll in Finish in Four receive a $500 per semester scholarship if they follow their plan each semester.

“Degree planning only works if we know when we are offering courses,” Chew said.

Provost Barbara Morris  is working with the deans of the schools to help the departments get a better handle on when they will be planning to regularly offer courses, Chew said.

“If you’re in a major where there are required courses but they’re offered on an irregular basis, it becomes really hard to put your schedule together,” she said.

A number of policies were implemented last year in an effort to remove some common barriers to graduation for students, including those pertaining to course withdraws and first week attendance policies, Chew said.

Students no longer need teacher permission to withdraw from a course, however they must withdraw by Oct. 25. Additionally, students may only have a maximum of three course withdrawals throughout their undergraduate career.

The goal of these policies and procedures is to help students through their degree programs more quickly, Chew said.

 
Print

Number of views (8259)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Campus Life, Learning and Health: How FLC planned for our return

By Dorothy Elder Indy Staff Writer

When Fort Lewis College made its decision to bring students back to campus for the fall 2020 semester during the COVID-19 pandemic, a plethora of considerations, new policies, and a reckoning of resources followed, trying to make the campus return as safe and manageable as possible.

When Fort Lewis College made its decision to bring students back to campus for the fall 2020 semester during the COVID-19 pandemic, a plethora of considerations, new policies, and a reckoning of resources followed, trying to make the campus return as safe and manageable as possible.  From the stickers on each and every desk telling students where to sit to maintain physical distancing, to...

Should I Stay or Should I Go? What does FLC's travel policy entail?

By Jackson Zinsmeyer Indy Staff Writer

 

 

  The COVID-19 pandemic has greatly affected the way Fort Lewis College students are able to live on and off campus.   Important information about restrictions was given to students prior to the start of the semester that would affect their time on campus this semester.  Rene Klotz, the FLC Health Center’s nurse practitioner and clinical director, recommends...

The personal and the political: FLC students talk their circumstances and values as they cast their vote for the 2020 presidential election

By Dorothy Elder Indy Staff Writer

This year, many Americans have their attention on the presidential election, which sits in the middle of a pandemic, a resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement and the nomination of a Supreme Court justice. With America’s increasing political polarization, those casting their votes for the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden, cannot wrap their heads around why anyone would vote to re-elect the Republican nominee, President Donald J. Trump and Trump supporters can’t see why you wouldn’t. 

This year, many Americans have their attention on the presidential election, which sits in the middle of a pandemic, a resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement and the nomination of a Supreme Court justice. With America’s increasing political polarization, those casting their votes for the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden, cannot wrap their...

Tradition TakΣover: Kappa Sigma pushes for recognition at FLC

By Will Charles Indy Staff Writer

Liam Elliot, interest group leader and sophomore at Fort Lewis College, is wanting to start a fraternity and be a part of a Kappa Sigma Chapter.

  Liam Elliot, interest group leader and sophomore at Fort Lewis College, is wanting to start a fraternity and be a part of a Kappa Sigma Chapter. Kappa Sigma Durango will begin at Interest Group level, which is when students can come to meetings and see what the chapter is all about, Booth said. Elliot’s goal is for the group to be able to colonize, a term fraternities use...

College, Quarantined

By Morgan Reed Indy Staff Writer

Can you remember being put into time-out as a child? My first week here, at Fort Lewis College, took me back to that nostalgic and harrowing feeling. 

Can you remember being put into time-out as a child? My first week here, at Fort Lewis College, took me back to that nostalgic and harrowing feeling.  I was figuring out  life on my own, far away from anyone familiar. Two days into this journey my roommate came into our place and shook things up a little more. I was in the kitchen when she answered the dreaded call alerting her of...

First1819202123252627Last