Canadian J o u r n a l of Higher Education, Vol. VIII-2, 1 9 7 8 University Transfer Programs in the Community College JOHN D. DENNISON* ABSTRACT During recent years, the increasing public demand for community college programs which lead to immediate employment has created something of an "identity crisis "for college faculty in British Columbia. Orginally, the college concept in this province reflected a comprehensive curriculum with a major emphasis upon academic programs which provide the student with transfer credit to the universities. However, comment in the public press and statements from the Ministry of Education indicate that the academic programs are very much out of favor and perhaps should be relegated to the universities. In view of the uncertainty which this situation has produced, it seemed important to take a new look at the college academic - transfer programs in 1977. The study which followed produced several important facts. Despite rumour to the contrary, enrollment in college academic programs has not declined over the past five years, but has remained at approximately 65%. The percentage of university transfer students actually transferring from colleges to universities has reached 16%, although there is considerable variation among the individual colleges. Studies indicate that only about half of the university transfer students actually " i n t e n d " to transfer to university. Obviously, many students in the university transfer programs are interested in general education or merely exploring their capacity or interest in academic study. At the University of British Columbia, the percentage of undergraduate students who have transferred from colleges has grown from 9% in 1969 to 18% in 1976. The majority of these students are successful in obtaining a university degree. Finally, it should be stated that the term "university transfer" is really a misnomer. The values of an academic education are just as real as ever, and transfer to university is not the sole criterion on which these programs should be judged. The academic programs of the community college meet the needs of a clientele served by no other institution, offer educational opportunity for a segment of society which has been ignored in the past and provide a major impact upon the quality of life in its immediate community. *Professor of Higher E d u c a t i o n , Faculty of Education, University of British C o l u m b i a . 28 J o h n D. Dennison RESUME Une nouvelle perspective pour les programmes des collèges publics qui mènent à l'Université La demande croissante pour les programmes des collèges publics qui conduisent directement au marché du travail est en train de créer une véritable crise "d'identité"chez les enseignants de ces collèges en Colombie-Britannique. Initialement la vocation collégiale dans cette province se situait au niveau d'un programme d'études complet où l'accent était principalement mis sur les matières académiques qui permettaient à l'étudiant de poursuivre ses études au niveau universitaire. Cependant les réactions de la Presse et les déclarations du Ministère de l'Education semblent indiquer que les programmes académiques sont délaissés et qu 'ils devraient être confiés à l'Université. Dans un contexte aussi incertain, il devient nécessaire de reconsidérer la situation de ces programmes acadmiques qui ont pour fonction de préparer aux études universitaires. Cette étude permet de mettre en valeur certains faits importants. Il semble tout d'abord que les effectifs étudiants dans les programmes académiques n'ont pas décliné au cours des cinq dernières années, comme le laisseraient croire les bruits qui circulent, mais qu 'ils se sont maintenus à peu près à 65%. Bien qu 'il y ait de grandes différences d'un collège à l'autre, on doit noter également que le taux de passage du niveau collégial au niveau universitaire a atteint 16%. Des études indiquent que seulement la moitié des étudiants inscrits dans ces programmes ont l'intention de poursuivre au niveau universitaire. Il semble donc que de nombreux étudiants recherchent dans ces programmes une formation générale de nature académique. A l'Université de Colombie-Britannique, le pourcentage des étudiants sous-gradués qui proviennent des collèges est monté de 9% en 1969 à 18% en 1976. La plupart de ces étudiants réussit à obtenir un diplôme universitaire. Enfin on doit noter que le terme de programme de "passage à l'Université" est vraiment impropre. La finalité de ces programmes en est une d'éducation en soi et non pas de passage à l'Université. Ces programmes répondent aux besoins d'une clientèle qui a été négligé dans le passé; aucune autre institution n 'est en mesure de fournir un tel service dont l'impact sur la qualité de la vie dans l'environnement immédiat est fondamental. Une analyse et une étude de cas sur la formation des auxiliaires d'enseignement dans les Universités canadiennes. Les auxiliaires d'enseignement jouent un rôle important dans l'Enseignement supérieur canadien. Cependant on connaît peu de choses sur la qualité de ce type d'enseignement et sur les efforts pour en améliorer l'efficacité. Cet article cherche donc à traiter un tel sujet. Ainsi une recherche menée dans les Universités canadienne indique que 20 à 30% de ces institutions ont développé des programmes pour améliorer la qualité de l'enseignement de leurs auxiliaires. Le programme de formation des auxiliaires d'enseignement de l'Université Simon Fraser a été choisi pour illustrer ces efforts et des preuves de son efficacité sont présentées. 29 University Transfer Programs in t h e C o m m u n i t y College BACKGROUND The community college concept, as it has evolved in British Columbia, is notably dissimilar in several respects to its counterpart in the other provinces of Canada. From their inception, the B.C. colleges have emphasized community involvement, both through the mode of financing and by the structure of governance. Local financial support, raised through school taxes, has contributed approximately 30% of the operating budgets of the colleges. Direct community representation on college councils has been ensured through a process by which cooperating school boards have each contributed at least one member. Although the Colleges and Provincial Institutes Act of 1977 will effect significant changes in both examples cited above, the British Columbia colleges will attempt to continue a community orientation. In terms of curriculum, the colleges in the province have consistently emphasized a comprehensive approach. A program balance between "academic" or "university transfer" and "technical-career" has occurred in each college from its establishment. Subsequently, vocational, trade and continuing education programs have been incorporated into the college curriculum. As the evolutionary process has taken place, certain changes in the character of the college student population have followed. In the early years college students were generally "college-age" and entered directly from secondary school. As a result of a variety of factors, including a recognition of the colleges' responsibilities towards the adult population, a declining population of traditional post-secondary students and a significant increase in college programs leading to employment, approximately half the college student population in 1977 is from a mature age group. At the same time, there has been a general disillusionment, expressed through the media, with the academic programs of the college. Unemployment statistics reflect the lack of employability of graduates from these programs. In effect, the dominant philosophy of the community college has shifted from its original academic orientation to its role as an essential component in the long-term economic plan for the future of the province. Understandably, there is considerable concern within the college community, particularly among the academic faculty, with the apparent wide-spread lack of sympathy, even antagonism, with the notion of liberal studies or intellectual quality of education. Among the current viewpoints on academic programs are those which suggest that the budgetary demands are indefensible, to others which imply that such programs are properly the business of the universities and should be relegated to the latter. Indeed, it is unusual to find any reference in current literature to the long-accepted proposition that the community college is the logical location for the idealized curricular mesh between vocational training and academic studies which would contribute much to the development of an educated citizenry. In an era when the emphasis upon participatory democracy demands a high quality of critical understanding on the part of its citizens, an anti-intellectual viewpoint is difficult to understand. Nevertheless, it seems appropriate to make some critical analyses of the so-called "university transfer" student in the community college. Perhaps it is time to reconsider the traditional assumptions made about these students, their goals and expectations, and 30 J o h n D. D e n n i s o n their behavior over time. Such analyses must involve empirical data, together with a certain amount of educated reflection upon questions for which no such data are available. University Transfer Enrollments and Transfer Rates to University An analysis of enrollment trends in the various college programs over the past few years gives some indication of the status of the university-transfer component of the college. Despite the widespread view that the proportion of students in this program had declined, the reduction is by no means as great as is generally believed. In fact, the proportion of the total enrollment in university-transfer programs has remained fairly constant since 1972 (see Table I.). Evidently, the academic curriculum is still the prime attraction for TABLE 1. University Transfer and *Career-Technical Students in B.C. Colleges 1968 - 76 Year University Transfer Career - Technical Total University Transfer as 7. of Total 1968 5,186 765 5,951 87.1 1969 5,615 1,165 6,780 82.8 1970 8,361 2,744 11,105 75.3 1971 9,036 4,025 13,061 69.2 1972 8,404 4,635 13,039 64.5 1973 10,019 5,365 15,384 65.1 1974 13,418 6,077 19,495 68.8 1975 14,813 7,101 21,944 67.5 1976 16,019 7,530 23,549 68.0 * Figures include both full time and part time students. Vocational students are not included. Source: B.C. Ministry of Education, Educational Data Services B.C. Post-Secondary Education Statistics, 1977 approximately two-thirds of the students attending the community colleges. The question arising from these data, which is perhaps the most important to students of the community college concept, is as follows. What percentage of the universitytransfer population is actually transferring to a university? Although an accurate answer to this question is virtually impossible to obtain, a reasonable estimate was made by using the following procedure: — The numbers of transfer students, by college, who entered U.B.C., S.F.U. and U.Vic, for the first time in September 1976 with some transfer credit were obtained from university files (Table 2.): 31 U n i v e r s i t y T r a n s f e r P r o g r a m s in t h e C o m m u n i t y College Table 2 Students Entering B.C. Universities with College Transfer Credit for the First Time in September 1976 University Entered College Attended Camosun U.B.C. U.Vic. S.F.U. Total 29 109 15 153 169 7 87 263 Cariboo 44 21 18 83 Douglas 198 17 162 377 Malaspina 30 59 14 103 New Caledonia 40 17 25 82 Okanagan 87 36 61 184 Selkirk 38 8 10 56 746 16 158 920 21 1 7 29 Capilano Van. C.C. Fraser V.C. East Kootenay 1 Northwest 1 1 Northern Lights 1 1 1 3 4 1 5 North Island - B.C.I.T. 23 Total Source: 1,428 - - - 297 1 - 2 - 559 23 2,284 Dennison, J.D., Forrester, G., and Jones C. British Columbia Colleges Articulation Study: Reports 23, 24, 25, B.C. Research, August, 1977. — The numbers of students enrolled in B.C. public colleges in university-transfer programs in October 1975, both full and part-time, were made available from the Ministry of Education (Table 3.). - The figures in Table 2 and Table 3 were compared (Table 4). Before drawing any conclusions from the data, the following caveats must be considered: 1. The figures include only students who transferred to British Columbia universities. No information is available on those students transferring to universities in other provinces or countries. 2. It may be argued that "part-time" college students would not be "eligible" to transfer to university in the following year. 32 J o h n D. D e n n i s o n Table 3 UNIVERSITY TRANSFER STUDENTS AT B.C. COMMUNITY COLLEGES BY INSTITUTION, BY YEAR, BY ENROLMENT STATUS FOR OCTOBER 13, 1975 Institution y/ytiaT, /Enrolment Status Total 2nd Year 1st Year FT PT Total FT PT Total 829 25 27 52 404 477 881 910 1,794 105 51 156 989 961 1,950 262 337 599 91 60 151 353 397 750 1,012 1,601 2,613 313 166 479 1,325 1,767 3,092 East Kootenay 2 253 255 - - - 2 253 255 Fraser Valley 249 203 452 12 40 52 261 243 504 Malaspina 332 165 497 152 47 199 484 212 696 New Caledonia 218 407 625 97 115 212 315 522 837 Northern Light: 15 76 91 2 0 2 17 76 93 North Island 23 120 143 0 18 18 23 138 161 Northwest 12 236 248 0 17 17 12 253 265 91 125 216 713 418 1,131 75 248 161 409 FT PT Camosun 379 450 Capilano 884 Cariboo Douglas Okanagan 622 293 Total 915 190 144 334 58 17 Vancouver 1,744 1,390 3,134 383 272 655 2,127 1,662 3,789 TOTAL 5,944 6,585 12,529 1,329 955 2,284 7,273 7,540 14,813 Selkirk SOURCE: College Statistical Reports, October 31, 1975. 3. Students enrolling in the university with college transfer credits may, or may not, come directly from colleges in the previous year. In this study, an assumption has been made that transfer is direct from college to university. 4. Figures on college enrollments include both first and second year U.T. students on the assumption that they could transfer after either year. 5. Experience in the past has shown that university registrar figures are not always accurate. 6. The October enrollment figures at colleges are usually "peak." Presumably, a number of college students withdraw between October and May of the same academic year. Percentages will vary according to the time enrollment was calculated. 7. The question of whether "academic" program students in colleges intended to transfer to university cannot be answered satisfactorily. Relating the data in Table 3 with that in Table 2, the following percentages may be calculated. 33 U n i v e r s i t y T r a n s f e r P r o g r a m s in t h e C o m m u n i t y College Table 4 Individual College Data Enrolled at University, First Time, Sept. 1976 College U.T. Students at Colleges, October 1975 Fulltime J Part time Percentage Transferring of fullt ime of all students Camosun 153 404 477 37 .9 17.4 Capilano 263 989 961 26 .6 13.4 Car iboo 83 353 397 23 .5 11.1 Douglas 377 1325 1767 28 5 12.2 Malaspina 103 484 212 21 .3 14.8 82 315 522 26 .0 10.0 Okanagan 184 713 418 25 8 16.3 Selkirk 56 248 161 22 6 13.7 New Caledonia 920 2127 1662 43 3 24.3 2221 6958 6577 31 .9 16.4 Fraser Valley * 29 261 243 11 1 5.8 East Kootenay * 1 2 253 50 0 0.4 2 12 253 16 7 0.8 3 17 76 17 9 3.2 Vancouver Total Northwest * Northern Lights 4 North Island * Grand Total 5 23 138 21 7 3.1 2261 7273 7540 31 .4 15.4 Colleges so indicated have been established in the last two years. Hence, transfer rates at this time are premature. 1. All transfer students in B.C. universities in 1976 as a percentage of all U.T. students enrolled in all* colleges in 1975-76.. . 15.4%. 2. All transfer students in B.C. universities in 1976 as a percentage of all* full time U.T. college students in 1975-76. . . 31.4%. 3. University transfer students from the nine "established" colleges (Camosun, Capilano, Cariboo, Douglas, Malaspina, New Caledonia, Okanagan. Selkirk. V.C.C.) as a percentage of all U.T. students enrolled in the "established" colleges in 1975-76.. .16.4%. 4. University transfer students from the nine "established" colleges as a percentage of all full time U.T. students enrolled in the "established" colleges in 1975-76. . .31.9%. 5. Transfer " r a t e " ranged from 24.3% at V.C.C, to 10.0% at the College of New Caledonia (see Table 3). * E x c l u d i n g B.C.I.T. 34 J o h n D. Dennison 6. There appeared to be some relationship between transfer "rate" and distance of the colleges from the universities. With some exceptions, the further college was located from the universities, the lower the transfer "rate." Expressed Intentions of Students Enrolling in "University Transfer" Programs at College It is extremely difficult to determine the intent of students who enroll in university transfer programs at the colleges. While the assumption has been made that all such students are university-bound, two studies* conducted during the past five years have suggested that such a conclusion is by no means universally valid. In 1972, students entering the various post-secondary institutions in B.C. were asked to indicate their plans after leaving college. A total of 7178 students responded, a figure which represented almost half of the first year college students at that time. Of students enrolled in university transfer programs, only 53% stated that they planned to continue full time to university, another 8% indicated that they intended to continue their education while holding a job. A surprisingly large proportion, 14%, had no definite plans. In 1973, a similar study was conducted as part of a process to assess the socio-economic background of students beginning their post-secondary education. In this study, 13,654 students responded, a figure which represented 56% of all students entering colleages, universities and other institutions in the province that fall. Of all students officially classified as "university-transfer" in the college system, 44% indicated an intention to continue their education full time, 17% stated that they would work and continue their education and another 14% were undecided between work and further education. Students who intended to continue their education were also asked to indicate the institution in which they intended to enroll. Of this group 77% nominated the university as their goal. In both studies, reported above, the total percentage of students intending to continue their education under all conditions was 61%. If this figure is applied to the universitytransfer students in Table 4 the re-assessed transfer rates become 52.3% (full time) and 26.9% (all students). Further, if the transfer rates are based additionally upon the figure of 77% of potential transferees who nominated the university as their goal, the rates become 67.9% (full time) and 34.9% (all students). Although these observations are somewhat hypothetical, they do throw a different light upon the acceptability of transfer rates. As a matter of interest, it is useful to note that, in another question which asked students to state their priority in certain frequently quoted objectives of post-secondary education, the following responses were recorded by university-transfer students. Learning skills that lead to a job 21% Learning skills and habits used in critical and constructive thinking 25% Attain satisfactory emotional and social adjustment 17% Developing a broad general outlook on a variety of subjects 33% *Dennison, et al., The Impact of Community College Working R e p o r t s : # 7 Post-Secondary S t u d e n t Survey. Published by B.C. Research, Vancouver, 1973. 35 U n i v e r s i t y T r a n s f e r P r o g r a m s in t h e C o m m u n i t y College From the limited data available from these studies, certain conclusions are inevitable. Students enrolling in university transfer programs are by no means homogeneous in terms of their educational goals or future plans. A large minority of these students are undecided and, presumably, certain conditions will determine their future choice. These conditions undoubtedly include such factors as financial status, academic success and availability of part-time employment. Perhaps the most intriguing part of the data is the evidence that less than a quarter of the university transfer students give first priority to the attainment of job skills. The equivalent figure in vocational schools was approximately 60% and at the B.C. Institute of Technology, 48%. Community College Transfer Students at the Universities In 1965 the first community college in the province, Vancouver, enrolled students in a university transfer program. In 1966 the first transfer students entered the university from the college, 176 in all. Since that time the number of colleges have increased to fourteen and the number of transfer students at universities has grown rapidly. While data on all transfer students at all universities are not available, there has been a continuing process of monitoring transfer students at the University of British Columbia, an institution which has enrolled by far the greatest proportion of all college transfers. The data from U.B.C. are summarized in Table 5. It is clear that while the number of transfer students has increased from 1,646 to 3,690 over a seven-year period, perhaps more interesting has been the increasing proportion of transfer students in the total university enrollment. In 1969, 9.1% of the U.B.C. undergraduate enrollment was college transfers. By 1976, the comparative figure was 18%. Clearly, the college transfers are having an impact of increasing significance upon the university. Table 5 Community College Transfer Students at U.B.C. Year First Time Enrollees Continuing Enrollees Total U.B.C. Undergraduate Enrollment College Transfer as Percentage of U.B.C. Enrollment 1969 NK NK 1646 18,080 9.1 1971 NK NK 1950 17,047 11.4 1972 951 1,333 2,284 16,520 13.8 1973 942 1,351 2,293 17,477 13.1 1974 1,022 1,779 2,801 19,361 14.5 1975 1,191 2,113 3,304 20,220 16.3 1976 1,381 2,227 3,690 20,202 18. 3 Source: Dennison, J.D., Forrester, G. and Jones G. British Columbia Colleges Articulation Study, Reports 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 23, 24, 25. B.C. Research, 1971-77. 36 J o h n D. Dennison By the fall of 1976, the last year on which data are available, the total number of college transfer students at the three public B.C. universities was 6,304 (U.B.C. 3,690, S.F.U. 1,858, U.Vic. 756). There has been a great deal of interest expressed in the academic performance of college transfer students while at university. It is extremely difficult to make broad generalizations on this question which will be valid and useful. There has been a great deal of study of transfer student performance over the past twelve years and it is clear that variation in performance occurs among colleges from which the students transfer, among the university faculties and departments in which they enter, by year of transfer, by sex, by age, by full time or part-time status and by eligibility of the student to enter university on high school graduation.** In an attempt to summarize some of these differences, the following comments may be made: 1. By comparison with "direct e n t r y " students, transfer students show fewer first class averages, comparable failure rates and a higher percentage of withdrawals from the faculty which they enter. 2. The performance of transfer students tends to improve after their first year of transfer. 3. Up to one half of the transfer student group was academically ineligible to enter university from secondary school. A high percentage of these students succeed at university. 4. "Borderline" transfer students, those who earn less than a 2.5 G.P.A. at college, account for the greatest proportion of the unsuccessful performances on transfer to university. Data on transfer student performance have been summarized by faculty, by department and by course at university. The prime value of these data lies in the use made of it by individual college departments. The real questions with respect to academic standards in the colleges can only be answered at that level by college faculty involved in the instructional process. CONCLUSION What comments might be made on the "university transfer" or "academic" programs of the community college? Any conclusions are very much products of conjecture. The data presented earlier in the paper suggest that, although the greater majority of students electing a transfer program intend to continue their studies at a university, a significant minority do not share such a goal. Presumably, this latter group are either pursuing an interest in academic studies for their own personal satisfaction or are exploring the values of such study without a predetermined objective. Probably, their motivations are based in both options. However, despite the assumption that the majority of students do intend to take advantage of the transfer route, further comment is justified. The literature on community colleges is well documented with carefully described explanations for their existence. They have been proposed as providing a "cooling o u t " function — an environment in which students with exaggerated but unrealistic academic goals come to the realization of their **Dennison, J.D.et al, The Impact of Community Colleges, B.C. Research, Vancouver, 1 9 7 5 ; see also Impact of Community Colleges, Working R e p o r t s 12, 18, 1 9 7 6 , B.C. Research. 37 University T r a n s f e r Programs in the C o m m u n i t y College real potential. Undoubtedly, many students enter college reflecting ambitions which are more based in their parents' dreams than their own. College is a safe, respectable choice which delays a career decision and ensures the moral, and often financial, support of their parents and friends. Eventually, many of these young people realize that college is neither the easiest, nor the most enjoyable, course of action and increased maturity leads to the selection of a more suitable alternative. In certain cases the decision to leave the academic stream is made easier because of the limited financial commitment made by going to college — certainly by comparison with the university! With respect to this discussion, it is interesting to note that a proposal for fourteen years of compulsory education is by no means new. While the suggestion has been associated with the need to remove eighteen-year-olds from the pool of unemployed, the general reaction has been less than favorable.* There is another kind of student population which is enrolled in academic "transfer" programs. These are mature students, many of whom lack extensive formal education. To these people the college represents an opportunity long denied — a route into an academic stream leading to a formal degree and increased earning power. While many of these mature students find the path to an academic credential is beyond their intellectual, financial or psychological resources, an element of doubt is reasonably satisfied. The gnawing suspicion that they could have done so much better in life, if they "only had the chance," is somewhat ameliorated. The general impression gained in preparing this paper is that the term "university transfer," when applied to a college program, is very much a misnomer. Clearly, this program serves a wide number of purposes and should be understood in that light. To evaluate such programs by simply focussing upon the number of students who actually transfer to university would be a simplification of the worst kind. On several counts, e.g.: community demand, quality of intellectual life; encounter with academic realities; the university-transfer programs are defensible. There are two extreme views currently held with regard to university transfer programs. The first is that such programs belong entirely in the universities, the other is that all first and second year academic programs should be placed in the colleges, leaving the universities to concentrate on the senior years. In this writer's opinion neither approach would be desirable. The college programs, as they presently exist, are providing a viable alternative to the university, at lower cost to the student, and under conditions in which many more members of the community may benefit. At the same time those students who would gain most from university retain the opportunity to do so. Finally, despite the current obsession with vocationalism in higher education; despite the evident unemployability of the liberal arts graduate; despite the limited stream of anti-intellectualism in contemporary thought; the need for liberal education is greater than ever. In a complex, rapidly evolving society in which technological change produces such anxiety in the work force, when instant communications net-works magnify the stresses *Buckley, W.F. Jr., " K e e p i n g Y o u t h at School W o n ' t Create New J o b s , " National Review. 38 J o h n D. Dcnnison of everyday life, when greater responsibility than ever is placed upon an informed electorate, the values of a liberal, theoretical and comprehensive education cannot be overestimated. The academic programs of the community college meet a clientele served by no other institution, offer educational opportunity for a segment of society which has been ignored in the past and provide a major impact upon the quality of life in its immediate community.