PSU and ICC sign advisement agreement to aid students
Wednesday, November 29, 2017 2:00 AM
News
Pittsburg, KS
The “Pitt State NOW” program allows students at ICC who anticipate attending PSU to obtain real-time degree audits from PSU and to have access to PSU advisors.
"It essentially removes all of the normal barriers that prevent students from moving seamlessly to their chosen institution of Pittsburg State," said ICC President Dan Barwick during the signing ceremony.
It's the
latest in a series of agreements between the two
institutions, he added, "that serve our students
very, very well."
"The idea is to create opportunities for
our students," Barwick said. "ICC is in the top 1 percent
in the country for helping students meet their stated educational
goals and this is part of why — because we create paths to
allow them succeed to succeed in whatever they have
chosen for themselves."
ICC is the
first community college to partner with PSU in this type of
advisement program, although other institutions have expressed
interest.
Barwick noted that every partnership is
only as good as the partners, and described his own experience as a
parent on a tour of PSU with his daughter, a senior in high
school, last
Wednesday — the day
before Thanksgiving.
"You'd
expect to find the campus deserted...no, the admission
department is full of folks, they're welcoming,
they're helpful, they're friendly. We were shown around the
campus by an ICC grad who then moved along to Pitt State and
then finally now is an employee of Pitt State..." he said. "What
was particularly interesting was her obvious enthusiasm and
admiration for Pitt State..."
"...I know a
sales job when I hear it. It was not just a sales job – she
really truly believed in the mission of Pitt State and
what it had to offer students," said
Barwick.
During
the signing ceremony, PSU President Steve Scott described the
longstanding connection between the two institutions. Scott
also noted that he taught at a community college for seven years,
an experience that was important to his career development and one
he said he took with him to PSU.
Scott said
PSU has as many as 500 community college
students transfer to the university each fall, and
noted that the admissions office put into place
specialized programming for those
students.
"We want to
make sure we support them and help them be successful..." Scott
said.
The
advisement agreement with ICC will bolster that
program.
"We want you
to know from the very first day you enroll (at ICC), the hours and
exactly how they'll transfer, and make it truly seamless," Scott
said. "Higher ed is a big investment, so let's be as
efficient with it as we can, for both the students' sake and
parents' sake, and those who are funding
it..."
ICC is in
the top four institutions that transfer students to
PSU.
Students who
sign up for the Pitt State NOW program will be assigned an academic
department at PSU and have access to the Gorilla User System (GUS)
which will allow them to perform degree
audits.
A reverse
transfer clause is also included in the Pitt State NOW agreement.
This will allow students who transfer to PSU before earning their
associate degree to apply PSU course credit back to ICC in order to
receive their 2-year degree.
“We want to
ensure students receive credit for their coursework,” said Melinda
Roelfs, PSU director of admission. “Earning your
associate degree is an important milestone on your journey towards
your bachelor’s degree.”
ICC students
interested in signing up for
the Pitt State
NOW program
can visit http://www.indycc.edu/admissions/pittnow to
learn more.