蜜桔直播

High Impact Practices

What are High-Impact Practices? 


High-impact practices (HIPs) are educational practices that research has shown to increase student retention rates, student engagement, and persistence to graduation for all students across diverse backgrounds.

HIPs can help improve student success, especially for historically underserved students. They can also facilitate learning inside and outside of the classroom. High-Impact Practices help support the state's Drive to 55 and Complete College initiatives.  Students who complete High-Impact Practices as a part of their education will receive badges on their transcripts showing the HIP they completed.

For more information about TBR鈥檚 High Impact Practices initiative:  

HIPs at 蜜桔直播

蜜桔直播, with the assistance of the Tennessee Board of Regents, is focusing on the following High-Impact Practices (HIPs) with the goal of every student having access to at least two high-impact practices before graduation.  

 
 
Certifications
Certifications are identifiers that a student has completed a qualification for an industry or a particular skill area. Certifications identified in this taxonomy refer to credit-bearing courses that curricularly enable a student to take an assessment leading to industry-recognized certification.
First-Year Experiences

First Year Experiences are courses that are designed for students entering college for the first time (or for the first time in a long time). These courses help introduce students to the necessary skills for college success such as critical thinking, writing, communication, information literacy, study skills, etc. These can be focused on a specific discipline or general education.

Global Cultural Awareness

Global and cultural awareness courses are credit-bearing experiences in which students learn how to communicate across cultures while developing an understanding of global interdependence and how it is influenced by culture 鈥 understood as the values, beliefs, practices, rituals, and behaviors held by groups of people. These courses will provide tools to increase students鈥 critical analysis of the global and intercultural nature of society and practice ethical reasoning to successfully navigate this world.

Honors Education

Honors education is characterized by in-class and extracurricular activities that meet the needs and abilities of the students it serves through practices that are measurably broader, deeper, or more complex than comparable learning experiences typically found at institutions of higher education. Honors experiences include a distinctive learner-directed environment and philosophy, provide opportunities that are appropriately tailored to fit the institution's culture and mission, and frequently occur within a close community of students and faculty (adapted from NCHC, 2016).

Learning Communities
Learning Communities consist of same groups of students taking two or more classes concurrently for academic credit and engaged in a substantial amount of time in common intellectual activities, within and outside the classroom, with intentional curricular connections.
Peer Mentoring

A mutually beneficial relationship between a specified student group (i.e. mentee) and a more experienced student (i.e. mentor) who engages with the mentee in a structured helping capacity to cultivate strong relationships and provide peer-to-peer support. In many cases, peer influence is stronger than that of the expert. (e.g. student services practitioner/faculty member) (Trip, 2000).  Through role modeling and sharing authentic stories of success and failure, the mentee gains the skills and support needed to navigate the college campus. In addition, through systematic training, the mentor gains transferable leadership skills and meaningful professional experiences that can be used to complement and positively affect the retention, academic success and educational experience of the mentee. (Newton & Ender 2010;  Terrion, & Leonard 2007).

Service Learning

Service-learning is a teaching and learning strategy that integrates meaningful community service with instruction and reflection to enrich the learning experience, teach civic responsibility, and strengthen communities. Curriculum includes structured field-based 鈥渆xperiential learning鈥 alongside community partners, which reinforces course learning outcomes. Within the TBR System, credit-bearing service-learning designated courses are incorporated into general education or college core requirements for a degree program.

Student Employment

Student Employment is the practice of providing financial support through Federal Work-Study (FWS), institutional funds, or departmental funds to students enrolled in an undergraduate program in exchange for their contribution to the academic department, support unit, or community organization in which they are employed. Student employees work toward meaningful learning outcomes through the fulfillment of job responsibilities. These outcomes may include intellectual growth, development of the NACE competencies, or receipt of technical training, among other mutually agreed-upon goals (adapted from NASPA).

As an instructor, you can ask for a student worker to help you!  

Study Abroad

Study abroad is a credit-bearing experience incorporated into general education or college core requirements for a certificate/degree program. Curriculum includes field-based 鈥渆xperiential learning鈥 in locations outside the U.S. with an emphasis on inter-cultural understanding and communication.  Students apply what they are learning in a real-world setting and reflect on their experiences abroad as part of the course requirements.  蜜桔直播 works with TBR Global Studies to develop and plan Study Abroad Experiences.

Technology Enhanced Learning

Instructional practices that leverage digital technologies to enhance teaching and learning. (Digital technology is any electronic tool, system, device or resource that facilitates learning and improves student performance. Examples include, but are not limited to, social media, online games, multimedia, productivity applications, cloud computing, interoperable systems, and mobile devices. Digital technologies can be used to increase engagement, encourage collaboration, deliver support, and increase awareness and understanding.)

Undergraduate Research

Undergraduate research is an inquiry or investigation conducted by an undergraduate student in collaboration with a faculty member that makes a unique intellectual, scholarly, or creative contribution to the discipline, and for which the student receives academic credit either through a course or independent study. The student's contribution may be part of a new or ongoing faculty research project (adapted from CUR).

Work-Based Learning

Work-based Learning represents credit-bearing experience that integrates knowledge and theory learned in the classroom with practical application and skills development in a professional setting. Internships, practicums, clinicals, co-ops and similar experiences, integrated with a class or related to a major field of study, give students the opportunity to gain valuable applied learning and make connections in professional fields students are considering for career paths, while giving employers the opportunity to guide and evaluate talent (NACE, 2011).

 

The Quality Dimensions of High-Impact Practices

  1. High Expectations
    Sets clear, challenging goals and supports students in reaching higher levels of academic success.
  2. Integrative Learning
    Connects course content to other subjects, careers, and everyday life to make learning meaningful and relevant.
  3. Discussion
    Engages students in thoughtful conversation about big ideas, encouraging verbal participation and deeper understanding.
  4. Diversity
    Introduces students to diverse perspectives across cultures and disciplines, broadening their understanding and fostering empathy.
  5. Feedback
    Provides regular, timely, and constructive responses to guide learning and strengthen the student-instructor connection.
  6. Student Research
    Encourages exploration of real-world issues, linking course concepts to social problems and personal experiences.
  7. Presentation
    Gives students a chance to publicly demonstrate what they鈥檝e learned, building confidence and reinforcing knowledge.
  8. Reflection
    Creates structured opportunities for students to think critically about their learning and connect it to their lives.

 

High Impact Practices at 蜜桔直播

If you would like more information on including a high-impact practice in your courses, please reach out to Angie Elkins, Coordinator of High-Impact Practices, angie.elkinsFREEWS.

 

Contact IDEAS

Hours
Mon - Thu 7:00am - 4:30 pm
Friday 8:00 - 4:30pm

Phone
423.585.6996

Address
Dr. David White Instructional Design Suite
Morristown Campus
Dr. Jack E. Campbell College Center
Suite 245 and 108A

 

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