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211 Pages·2017·0.92 MB·English
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RunningHead: SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES SUPPORTINGDIFFERENTLY-ABLEDSTUDENTS INTWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITYCOLLEGES By Mildred Faulkner Waale A dissertation submitted to The Graduate School of Education Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Education Graduate Program in Education Approved by _______________________________ Melinda Mangin, Ph.D., Chair _______________________________ Alisa Belzer, Ph.D., Committee Member _______________________________ Sharon Ryan, Ed.D., Committee Member New Brunswick, NJ January, 2017 SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES © 2017 Mildred Faulkner Waale ALL RIGHTS RESERVED i SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES Abstract Federal disabilities legislation (theIndividuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act, or IDEIA of 2004) continued the movement of disabled (“differently-abled”) persons from segregated public educational institutions to fully integrated general education classrooms, with appropriate accommodations for the individual’s disabilities. Public schools’ implementation of this legislation has resulted in differently-abled high school students havingincreased skills and options as they enter the postsecondary world of work and/or education. Currently, there is a wide gap between the levels of support these students experience in public school versus the levels of supports they can expect in post-secondary education and/or in employment. For many of these students, postsecondary education on the campuses of community colleges may bridge that gap. The purpose of this studywas to comparethelevels of and different types of support for differently-abled students at two New Jerseycommunity colleges. Thefollowingresearch questions wereinvestigated: (1)What support services are provided to and accessed by differently-abled students in two New Jerseycommunity college settings? (2)What difficulties do administrators and students encounter in providing and accessing support services in the community college setting? and (3)How helpful arethese services in supportingstudents’ progress towards their individual educational and career goals? Twenty differently-abled students and four community college administrators participated in this mixed methods study. Findings indicated broad use of extended time for testing, testing in quiet testing centers; assistive technology; and pre-enrollment, academic, and transfer counselingservices. Major challenges identified by administrators included difficulties in planning for and funding needed services due to open enrollment policies. Challenges identified by students included financial ii SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES challenges, self-advocacy for required services, balancing the competing demands for time spent at work versus time spent studying, and needing to complete remedial courses prior to earning college credits. Findings also indicated comparative differences in CC1 and CC2 students’ perceptions of the helpfulness and quality of services for the following service categories: pre- enrollment services, academic counseling, assistive technology, and financial services counseling. Additional research is called for to obtain statistical data regarding graduation and attrition rates for differently-abled students, associated with the levels of accommodations and support services they require for academic success. Also, further research is required on cost and requisite funding needed to provide these supports. Possible implications for Disability Services Office (DSO) administrators are: increased use of Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) standards to self-audit service provisioning; increased scaffolding of differently-abled students throughout their progression in college and their transition to post-college academic/employment pursuits; and direct, mandated instruction in available services and supportive technologies to assist students in accessing appropriate and effective supports. Key words: community colleges, postsecondarydisability services and accommodations, and communitycollege disabilityservices, Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) standards. iii SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES Table of Contents Contents ABSTRACT....................................................................................................................................II TABLE OF CONTENTS............................................................................................................IV LIST OF TABLES....................................................................................................................VIII LIST OF FIGURES.....................................................................................................................IX CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION..................................................................................................1 Problem Statement..........................................................................................................................2 Purpose Statement..........................................................................................................................4 Personal Connection to this Research...........................................................................................5 Research Design..............................................................................................................................5 CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW.....................................................................................8 Legislative and Judicial Foundations for Special Needs Supports.............................................8 Impact of Disability Legislation: Community Colleges and Employment..............................13 Postsecondary Disability Services...............................................................................................16 Brief history of postsecondary disability services..........................................................16 Postsecondary disability service standards....................................................................17 The community college context and definitions of “academic success.”......................20 Examination of postsecondary disability services through four different lenses........24 Some barriers to success identified in previous studies.................................................37 Administrative approaches to overcoming barriers and increasing success...............40 Community college disability support services cost and funding considerations.......44 Literature Review Conclusion.....................................................................................................46 iv SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES CHAPTER 3: METHODOLOGY..............................................................................................48 Research Perspective....................................................................................................................48 Role of the Researcher..................................................................................................................49 Research Sites................................................................................................................................50 Sample Selection and Participant Recruitment.........................................................................52 Ethical Considerations..................................................................................................................55 Data Collection Procedures..........................................................................................................56 Quantitative Data Analysis..........................................................................................................58 Qualitative Data Analysis.............................................................................................................59 Qualitative Data Analysis: Open Coding........................................................................60 Qualitative Data Analysis: Axial Coding........................................................................62 Validity...........................................................................................................................................64 Study Design Limitations.............................................................................................................65 CHAPTER 4: FINDINGS............................................................................................................66 I. What support services are provided to and accessed by students?......................................66 CC1 and CC2 administrator responses regarding the services they provide.............67 CC1 and CC2 student responses regarding services they access.................................72 II. What difficulties do administrators/students have providing/accessing services?............74 Difficulties administrators face in providing services...................................................75 Difficulties students face in accessing services...............................................................78 III. How helpful are these services in supporting students’ progress towards their educational and career goals?......................................................................................................81 v SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES Descriptive statistics..........................................................................................................82 Qualitative data by service category: insights from students and administrators.....89 Additional qualitative findings......................................................................................103 CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION.....................................................................................................109 Discussion of AHEAD Standards Relative to this Study.........................................................109 Community College DSO Efforts to Support Differently-Abled Students............................112 Pragmatic and Transformative Use of Research Results........................................................114 Implications for Practice............................................................................................................115 Study Limitations........................................................................................................................118 Future Research..........................................................................................................................119 REFERENCES............................................................................................................................121 APPENDICES.............................................................................................................................130 A: Annotated Timeline of Federal Disabilities Legislation/Significant Court Rulings........130 B: Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) Postsecondary Education Disability Program Standards and Performance Indicators..................................................134 C: Student Recruitment Letter..................................................................................................136 D: NJ Community College Administrators/Disability Services Support Center Staff Interview Protocol.......................................................................................................................137 E: Community College Student Interview Protocol................................................................140 F: Sample Memo.........................................................................................................................153 G: Description of Research Sites...............................................................................................155 H: Student Participants’ Demographics...................................................................................156 vi SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES I: Community College 1 Composite Student Responses to Likert Scale Ratings: Students’ Rating of the Helpfulness of Services........................................................................................157 J: Community College 1 Composite Student Responses to Likert Scale Ratings: Students’ Rating of the Quality of Services Used......................................................................................160 K:Community College 2 Composite Student Responses to Likert Scale Ratings: Students’ Rating of the Helpfulness of Services........................................................................................163 L: Community College 2 Composite Student Responses to Likert Scale Ratings: Students’ Rating of the Quality of Services Used......................................................................................166 M: Axial Coding and Analysis of Student Goal Movement....................................................169 Goal Level Categories.....................................................................................................173 Student Goal Movement.................................................................................................174 Discussion of Students’ Educational and Career Goal Movement Analysis and Findings..................................................................................................................................178 M-1: Categorization of CC1 & CC2 Students’ Self-Reported Prior and Current Academic and Career Goals................................................................................................183 M-2: Tracking of Student Goal Movement..................................................................190 M-3: Sample Dialogue about Catalyst for Goals: CC2-Student-1.............................196 vii SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES Listof Tables Table 1: Comparative Community College Attrition/Graduation Rates and Employment Participation/Unemployment Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Table 2: Open Coding Mapping of Research Questions to Protocol Questions . . . . . . . 61 Table 3: Association of Research Questions to Open Coding Core Categories – Used to Map Raw Data to Research Concepts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Table 4: CC1 and CC2 Students’ Report of the Services & Accommodations they Use . 77 Table 5: CC1 Students’ Ratings of the Helpfulness of Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Table 6: CC2 Students’ Ratings of the Helpfulness of Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Table 7: Analysis of CC1 & CC2 Students’ Ratings of the Helpfulness of Services . . . . 86 Table 8: CC1 Students’ Rating of the Quality of Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Table 9: CC2 Students’ Rating of the Quality of Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Table 10: Analysis of CC1 and CC2 Students’ Perceptions of the Quality of Services . .88 ================================================================ TableAppendix M-1: Students’ Self-Reported Goals: Categories and Criteria . . . . . 183 Table Appendix M-2: Criteria for Mapping Student Goal Movement . . . . . . . . . . . . 190 Table Appendix M-3: Assessing Student Goal Movement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196 Table Appendix M-4: Calculating Improvement in Student Goal Movement . . . . . . . 196 viii SUPPORTING DIFFERENTLY-ABLED STUDENTS IN TWO NEW JERSEY COMMUNITY COLLEGES List of Figures FigureAppendix M-1: Axial Coding Diagram. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171 ix

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interventions throughout disabled students' early intervention,4 pre-school,5 . enrollment is based on residency and students are not required to meet complete understanding” of the results of this research and apply the to explore the systems of rewards, punishments, role models, and lessons.
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