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Orientation 2014 VENITA J. SPOSETTI, DMD ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR EDUCATION
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Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Dec 31, 2015

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Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education. Orientation 2014. Student Performance Evaluation Committee (SPEC). Orientation 2014. Student Performance Evaluation Committee. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Orientation 2014

VENITA J. SPOSETTI, DMDASSOCIATE DEAN FOR

EDUCATION

Page 2: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Orientation 2014STUDENT PERFORMANCE

EVALUATION COMMITTEE (SPEC)

Page 3: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

The Student Performance Evaluation Committee (SPEC) acts on recommendations from units of the college relative to:

Outstanding student academic achievement

Student Counseling, Probation and Dismissal.

STUDENT PERFORMANCE EVALUATION COMMITTEE

Page 4: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Voting members six faculty members elected by the Faculty Assembly

three predoctoral students elected by their respective class members

the Basic Science Coordinator. Nonvoting members include:The Assistant Dean for Student and Multicultural Affairs

the Associate Dean for Education

SPEC

Page 5: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Each semester the SPEC committee recognizes the top ranked 10% of each class by naming them to the College of Dentistry Dean’s list.

In the event of a tie for the 10th position, all students tied for the 10th position will be included.

DEAN’S LIST

Page 6: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

The top 10 percent of the original entering class, ranked at the end of Fall semester 10, is eligible to graduate with honors.

GRADUATION WITH HONORS

Page 7: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

New students worry that they will be asked to leave dental school if they fail a test.

RELAX. We don’t dismiss students who fail a test.

(PS – a lot of people fail their first test in dental school)

(PPS – just don’t fail all of them )

WHAT STUDENTS WORRY ABOUT…

Page 8: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

You were admitted to this program because we think that you have the ability to be a successful dentist.

We want everyone to be successful in school and graduate 4 years from now.

That is our GOAL.

WE WANT YOU TO BE SUCCESSFUL!

Page 9: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

BUT, only you can do the work that is necessary to become a dentist.

The faculty can not do that for you.

WE will help you, but you are in charge of your learning.

WE WANT YOU TO BE SUCCESSFUL!

Page 10: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Openness to learningRecognize that they are learning difficult new skillsThat means that they are beginners, not experts,

That it takes time and repetition to improveThat spending time listening to feedback and working will lead to improvement

Do not expect to be perfect, especially when they are just beginning

WHAT SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS DO

Page 11: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

IT’S NOT MAGIC

Page 12: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Ask for help when they are strugglingCourse directorBig siblingAttend practice sessions and get feedbackChange their approach to learning the material

Know that they are responsible for learning

WHAT SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS DO

Page 13: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Change your approach to studyingForm a study group, attend lectures, study with a partner, get a planner and schedule your time so you study AND you play.

WHAT SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS DO

Page 14: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Denial – it can’t be meI have never failed anythingI don’t need a tutor, I just need to work harder, study longer, stay up later…

WHAT DOES NOT WORK….

Page 15: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Dental school IS different from undergraduate and graduate programs.

You probably will have to change your study strategies.

WHAT DOES NOT WORK….

Page 16: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Pretend you did fine, tell everyone you are doing fine (when you really failed)

Do nothing and hope things will magically improve

Refuse tutoring help when it is offeredAnd so what can happen is that the student can get trapped in a pattern of failure….student then fails the next exam(s)

And even the next ones…And then fails the entire course.

WHAT DOES NOT HELP….

Page 17: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

We hope you would have asked for help a LONG time before this happens.

Likely, you will have already been contacted and offered help in finding ways to improve.

If you do fail a course, you will have a hearing before the SPEC committee.

Some course directors offer students the chance to remediate their course before earning a final failing grade. They are NOT required to do this.

WHAT IF YOU FAIL AN ENTIRE COURSE?

Page 18: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

A hearing before SPEC is just that, a hearing.

The purpose is to hear what the student has to say about their situation,

how they got into the situation and the steps they think they need to take to get out of the situation.

SPEC HEARING

Page 19: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Your academic records are private. They are protected under FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act).

We are very careful not to share your personal academic information with others.

This means we also don’t share others academic information with you.

AND, IT’S CONFIDENTIAL

Page 20: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Because we protect your privacy, other students will not know about academic problems, unless the student shares that information.

AND, IT’S CONFIDENTIAL

Page 21: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Please know that a long time before we get to the point of a student repeating an entire course or year, lots of effort has gone on behind the scenes in identifying and helping with tutoring, counseling, and other interventions to help the person.

But only the people involved will know.

AND, IT’S CONFIDENTIAL

Page 22: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

A student failing a course, is invited by SPEC for a hearing and automatically placed on probation.

Probation means that you have been identified as having significant academic difficulty.

ACADEMIC PROBATION

Page 23: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Students remain on probation for an indefinite period of time until the SPEC determines the student is no longer in academic jeopardy based on sustained academic progress.

Students on probation can not represent the university in any outside event – humanitarian trips, officer in clubs.

ACADEMIC PROBATION

Page 24: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Students on academic probation who fail additional courses or whose overall GPA falls below 2.5 at the end of the first academic year, can be considered for retracking and/or dismissal from school.

RETRACKING OR DISMISSAL

Page 25: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

Retracking: A student may be required to repeat a year when the student's academic accomplishments are substandard.

The purpose of retracking is to recognize that the student may have the potential to make satisfactory progress if the student's knowledge and skills are improved by repetition. The net effect of retracking will be to extend graduation date.

RETRACKING OR DISMISSAL

Page 26: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

As a last resort, A student may be dismissed from the College of Dentistry if the student fails to maintain normal academic progress.

Such dismissal does not prohibit the student from enrolling in other programs or colleges, if he or she meets the requirements for those programs.

DISMISSAL

Page 27: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

After the SPEC decision, there is an Appeal Process.

First, to the Dean of the College of Dentistry.

And if the student disagrees with the Dean’s decision on the appeal

The student can appeal to the Vice President for Student Affairs.

A Student has the right to remain enrolled until all appeals have been completed.

APPEAL PROCESS

Page 28: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

So we don’t dismiss students just for doing poorly on a single test.

IF you are having academic problems, ask for help.

Remember, that we will keep your academic issues private and that means that you will not know about other people’s academic issues.

NOW YOU KNOW

Page 29: Venita J. Sposetti, DMD Associate Dean for Education

WE WANT YOU ALL TO BE SUCCESSFUL