Servicemembers Opportunity Colleges Best Practices for Creating a Military Friendly Institution



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Servicemembers Opportunity Colleges Best Practices for Creating a Military Friendly Institution AACRAO Annual Conference Chicago, IL April 14, 2009

What makes an institution Military Friendly? Defining the term and characteristics

Military Students and Veterans: Subpopulation of Adult Learners Active-Duty Market National Guard and Reserves Market Veterans in the Community Market Family Member Market

Potential Military Market Active Duty Nat l Guard Reserve Total Army 532,400 352,600 205,000 1,090,000 Navy 326,323-66,700 393,023 Marine Corps 194,000 - ` 39,600 233,600 Air Force 317,050 106,756 67,400 491,206 Coast Guard 40,903-10,000 50,903 Total 2,258,864 Note: Guard and Reserve 9/11/01 to 10/31/07: 575,000 mobilized & 455,000 deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan DoD FY09 S.3001 Appropriations Bill

Starting Point being a SOC Consortium member Becoming a SOC Consortium member institution is minimum requirement; demonstrates that your enrollment policies help military access your programs SOC Principles and Criteria outline expectations and obligations

Criterion 1: Transfer of Credit Demands of military service or mobility demands makes it unlikely that a servicemember can complete all degree program requirements at one institution. Therefore, a SOC Consortium institution designs its transfer practices for servicemembers to: minimize loss of credit avoid duplication of coursework while maintaining the academic integrity of its programs

Criterion 2: Academic Residency Requirements A SOC Consortium institution limits academic residency requirements for active-duty servicemembers to no more than 25 percent of the undergraduate degree program; for degree programs completely online, the academic residency requirement set to no more than 30% Recognizes all credit course work offered by the institution as satisfying academic residency requirements, regardless of breaks in attendance.

Criterion 2: Academic Residency Requirements Allows servicemembers to satisfy academic residency requirements with: courses taken from the institution at any time during their program of study (may take breaks in enrollment due to deployments/ mobilizations). Specifically avoiding any "final year" or "final semester" residency requirement. Should consider flexible re-entry points and procedures; established procedures for withdrawal/ completion.

Criterion 3: Awarding College Credit for Learning Experiences in Armed Services A SOC Consortium institution evaluates learning acquired for specialized military training and occupational experiences when applicable to a servicemember's degree program. Recognizes and uses the ACE Guide to the Evaluation of Educational Experiences in the Armed Services in determining the value of learning acquired in military service.

Criterion 4: Crediting Extra- Institutional Learning SOC Consortium colleges provide processes to evaluate and award appropriate undergraduate level credit for such learning College Level Examination Program (CLEP), DANTES exams, ASE and Excelsior College Testing programs, recognizing that learning occurs in extrainstitutional and non-instructional settings.

SOC Principles and Criteria For full details and explanation of SOC Consortium membership standards refer to the SOC Web site: http://www.soc.aascu.org/socgen/criteria.html For list of current SOC Consortium institutions by state, go to: http://www.soc.aascu.org/socgen/coll_univlist. html

Standards vs. Practices Execution of the SOC Consortium minimum standards is the baseline for successfully being recognized as a Military Friendly academic institution. What you do above the minimum standards is what attracts and retains military students. Bob Bothel USCG Voluntary Education

Scenario 1 Couldn t say NO A college recruiter contacts a servicemember about his college s programs. Surprised and flattered, the servicemember says yes, he d like to pursue a degree with that college. However, after talking with an education counselor, the servicemember changes his mind and tells the college recruiter that he is no longer interested in the college. But the calls keep coming at home, at work, on his cell phone. The servicemember gets two or three e-mails a week all urging the servicemember to change his mind and enroll.

Scenario 2 Personal Information or else Wanting to learn more about the college, a student finds that she has to input her name, address, work phone number, home phone number, and e- mail address to access information on the college s home page. Without providing all of that information, the prospective student can t see the degrees offered by the school, its catalog, its college policies, its accreditation status, or even course costs.

Scenario 3 College for free! Free College Tuition for Military Students! screams the headline in the college s ad in the military base newspaper. Send for more information about how you can earn a degree at no cost. (When student inquires, no mention is made Tuition Assistance or other education benefits to which the student may be entitled, nor are limitations or obligations that go along with free mentioned.)

Scenario 4 No way out A student signs up for an online course with a college. She chooses to withdraw she knows she s going to be deployed soon, but can t figure out how to un-enroll. She tries phone calls and e-mails but gets no response or confirmation from the school. So she logs on to the first online session of the course to announce that she is NOT taking the course. But the college bills her for the full amount of the course because she attended one class before dropping it.

Scenario 5 TODAY ONLY! The college recruiter was really helpful and listened to the military student. He made some good suggestions about degrees the servicemember could pursue and even suggested the student look at degrees offered by other colleges on the installation. Then, while the servicemember was thinking about his options, the recruiter said, Look, I can get you a military tuition scholarship but the offer is only good until midnight. If you want to lock in the reduced rate, you have to make a decision and enroll NOW.

Military Student Bill of Rights All military student populations have basic rights to satisfactory college marketing, admissions, and student services practices Military students expect flexibility with administrative processes to accommodate mobility and mobilization job requirements

How Our Colleges Are Responding Priority registration for returning military students Simplified/expedited application process for readmission Extended/flexible enrollment deadlines Course schedules adapted for transitioning active-duty servicemembers Academic and counseling services focused on military students Special Web pages for returning military students Veterans support groups, centers, and lounges Scholarship opportunities Deferred tuition payment plans (to accommodate TA and VA paperwork lags) Academic research addressing the needs of returning servicemembers

Model Web Sites Central Texas College <http://www.ctcd.edu/student/prospective.htm> Prospective Student page - Military Student, Military Spouses Includes photos and text about military students integrated into their main college Website. <http://www.ctcd.edu/> University of Maryland University College Military Student Page <http://www.umuc.edu/mil/mil_home.shtml> Links to the SOC Web site from their Academic Advising page for military students; includes tuition and fees, and VA education benefit forms accessible from there <http://www.umuc.edu/mil/mil_advising.shtml> San Diego State University <http://newscenter.sdsu.edu/military/> Highlights military students and their veteran student organization on their site. Thomas Edison State College <http://www.tesc.edu/879.php> Military programs Web page. Click on "Why Thomas Edison State College?" for a link to SOC Web page <http://www.tesc.edu/930.php>. University of Phoenix <http://military.phoenix.edu/> Provides an array of financial information from their military page <http://military.phoenix.edu/tuition_and_financial_options/military.aspx>

Uncertain whether your institution is military friendly? Host a focus group of veterans and servicemembers to share feedback on institutional policies and services Form a working group to explore ways to be more flexible and responsive to servicemember and veteran needs Help form student veteran organization to support transitional needs of veterans <http://www.studentveterans.org/

Being Military Friendly... is it worth it? FY 2008 Tuition Assistance (TA) Over 823,000 course enrollments Graduated over 47,000 personnel ranging from High School completion to PhD. Distributed to academic institutions $930 million Severely Injured Servicemembers Military Spouse Career Advancement Accounts Spouses of active duty and activated Guard and Reserve servicemembers Receive up to $6,000 of financial for post-secondary education career training

Being Military Friendly... is it worth it? Consider these facts: Over 523,000 veterans received VA education benefits in FY 08 (Source: Department of Veterans Affairs) Percentage of veterans using GI Bill benefits has increased 24% since 2001 (Source: USA Today) Projected increase in use of Post 911 GI Bill funds is 25-30%

Contact Us Servicemembers Opportunity Colleges 1307 New York Avenue, NW Fifth Floor Washington, DC 20005-4701 Phone: 800-368-5622; 202-667-0079 Fax: 202-667-0622 E-mail: socmail@aascu.org