A recently released CCBC student data study shows ALP students are earning more credits (persisting) when compared to students who took the traditional developmental writing classes.  The study looked at 3 cohorts of ALP and Non-ALP students who enrolled at CCBC in Fall 2010, Fall 2011, and Fall 2012.

The first data set compared the ALP and Non-ALP students who passed ENG 052 (CCBC’s upper- level developmental writing class) and earned at least 12 credits within 1 year.

New-CCBC-Student-Data-2

Breakdown by year:

Fall 2010       Total N=1,616

ALP                (N=288)                    33% (94 students earned at least 12 credits)

Non-ALP       (N=1,328)                  13% (172 students earned at least 12 credits)

Fall 2011       Total N=1,592

ALP                (N=549)                    32% (177 students earned at least 12 credits)

Non-ALP       (N=1,043)                   14% (147 students earned at least 12 credits)

Fall 2012       Total N=1,470

ALP                (N=590)                      37% (219 students earned at least 12 credits)

Non-ALP       (N=880)                      16% (138 students earned at least 12 credits)

 

The second data set compared the ALP and Non-ALP students who passed ENG 052 (CCBC’s upper- level developmental writing class) and earned at least 24 credits within 2 years.

New-CCBC-Student-Data

Fall 2010       Total N=1,616

ALP                (N=288)                      28% (80 students earned at least 24 credits)

Non-ALP       (N=1,328)                    13% (169 students earned at least 24 credits)

Fall 2011       Total N=1,594

ALP                (N=550)                       25% (136 students earned at least 24 credits)

Non-ALP      (N=1,044)                     14% (141 students earned at least 24 credits)

Fall 2012       Total N=1,470

ALP                (N=590)                       27% (160 students earned at least 24 credits)

Non-ALP       (N=880)                        14% (124 students earned at least 24 credits)