By Mike Taylor
Walnut – Mt. San Antonio College’s Pathways to Transfer program – a program designed to help students complete a degree and transfer to a four-year university – recently received a $100,000 donation from San Gabriel Valley Charitable Foundation philanthropist, Gary Chow.
The two-year $100,000 gift will help the Pathways program continue its work to provide an accelerated learning program to help students taking basic skills English and math courses succeed and keep them on track to transfer.
Through the program, students in basic skills courses take classes in cohort groups with the same instructor in an accelerated time frame. Three courses are fit into an intersession and semester so that students are fully engaged in the subject. The classes include the same instructor throughout the sequence to provide a sense of continuity, and each class has a tutor to provide additional help.
The courses are also linked to a learning community class, a counseling class, or a library class. The result has been a dramatic rise in completion rates, a decrease in English and math phobias, and increased student self-confidence.
“There is a sense of continuity and support in this program that enables basic skills students to succeed at higher levels and makes this program unique,” said Mt. SAC American Language Professor and Basic Skills Coordinator, Glenda Bro.
In the last year, persistence rates for Pathways students were 36 percent higher in math courses compared to non-Pathways students. In English, Pathways students performed 27 percent better than non-Pathways students.
Persistence rates measure whether students successfully complete the sequence of courses.
“These students aren’t just passing one class. They are committing to the program and completing the entire sequence of classes,” said Bro.
