Certified Nursing Assistant Program
2024-2025 Program Review
1 ) In 3-5 sentences, describe your unit to an audience of potential students. Many units take this information from their website. If it has been awhile since your unit has updated its website, take this opportunity to design a brief description of your unit for today’s students.
Nurse 100: Certified Nurse Assistant (7 units)This course is accredited through the California Department of Public Health. Upon completion, students are eligible to take the licensing exam through the State of California, enabling work in a long-term care facility, rehabilitation facility and some subacute facility. There are 86 hours of classroom theory, 9 hours of skills lab practice, and over 100 hours of hands-on clinical experience with patients in a nursing facility. To qualify for selection into the course, you must 1) complete an application with proof of completing a medical terminology course with a "C" or better
2 ) Who is disproportionately impacted in your unit?
Based on gender the certified nurse assistant field is predominately female and male students represent 13%.
Use the Disproportionate Impact* reports below to answer question #2. These reports show how student achievement outcomes vary by gender, race/ethnicity, veteran, foster youth, disability, and income/poverty level status to enable users to engage in more advanced student-centered and equity-centered analysis, reflection, and planning. These reports are integrated with ARC's Data on Demand system to provide users with more sophisticated and nuanced ways of exploring their unit's data. To access the reports, you may be prompted to log in to ARC's Data on Demand system. If so, click on "Log in with ARC Portal" and enter your Los Rios single sign-on credentials (same as Canvas or Intranet).
*This link provides the California Community College Chancellor's Office's definition of disproportionate impact.
Disproportionate Impact
The disproportionate impact (DI) links now direct you to your unit’s DI data in ARC Data on Demand. The DI data will show which student groups are experiencing disproportionate impact for course success rates (A, B, C, Cr, P), A-B rates, and course completion rates (students who did not withdraw) at the course level.
In addition, a new report on intersectional DI (e.g., ethnicity/race by gender) is available for assessing intersectional Di for course success rates. The intersection DI report defaults to the subject code level (e.g., all ENGWR courses). Use the org tree in the side bar to filter to individual courses (click on the right arrow next to American River College, right arrow next to your division, right arrow next to your department/discipline, then select the specific course to view).
If prompted to log in, click on “Log in with ARC Portal” and enter your Los Rios single-sign on credentials (same as Canvas or Intranet).
3 ) What equity advancing actions have your programs already taken?
Inclusive Admission Practices: The CNA program has eliminated discriminatory screening processes, such as reading and comprehension assessments, which previously hindered enrollment for English as a Second Language (ESL) students. Philanthropic Support: By the Arthur Rupe Grant Foundation has focused on alleviating the Certified Nursing Assistant shortage by funding nursing education. This contributor has facilitated the graduation of hundreds of CNA's addressing both workforce needs and educational accessibility.
4 ) What will be your unit’s strategies for eliminating disproportionate impact (DI)?
By addressing gender stereotypes and targeted recruitment through advertising in spaces where male students engage such as gyms and fitness centers, martial arts, boys and girls clubs, high school career counseling offices, job fairs, to highlight career stability, financial security, job stability and potential career growth (e.g., transitioning from CNA to RN).
5 ) What support do you need to eliminate disproportionate impact (DI)?
Financial incentives such as scholarships for male students, offer tuition assistance or grants to encourage enrollment.
6 ) What other issues or concerns have affected your unit and are important for you to bring up?
Transportation and childcare issues. Some students, particularly single parents, may struggle with reliable transportation or childcare support. Language and cultural barriers, non-native English speakers may struggle with coursework, exams.
The Enrollment, Department Set Standards, and SLO Data Set may be additional considerations and helpful for answering this optional question, but not required. To access the reports, you may be prompted to log in to ARC's Data on Demand system. If so, click on "Log in with ARC Portal" and enter your Los Rios single sign-on credentials (same as Canvas or Intranet).
Enrollment
The enrollment links now direct you to your unit’s enrollment data in ARC Data on Demand (5 years of duplicated enrollment for Fall or Spring terms). Using the filters available along the left side navigation in ARC Data on Demand, enrollment data can now be disaggregated or filtered on a number of course or student characteristics to provide more fine-tuned exploration and analysis of enrollment data. Examples include disaggregating by course, ethnicity/race, gender, and age.
If prompted to log in, click on “Log in with ARC Portal” and enter your Los Rios single-sign on credentials (same as Canvas or Intranet).
Department Set Standards
Shows course success rates (# of A, B, C, Cr, and P grades expressed as a % of total grade notations) compared to lower and upper thresholds. Thresholds are derived using a 95% confidence interval (click the report link for details). The lower threshold is referred to as the Department Set Standard. The upper threshold is referred to as the Stretch Goal.
- Green
- Most recent academic year exceeds the upper threshold
- Yellow
- Most recent academic year falls between the lower and upper threshold
- Red
- Most recent academic year falls below the lower threshold
SLO Data Set
The faculty's continuous review of student achievement of course SLOs is documented using the Authentic Assessment Review Record (AARR), which involves a review of student work demonstrating achievement of the course SLO. Faculty record student achievement for a randomly assigned course SLO based on one or more authentic assessments that they regularly perform in their classes. The aggregated results are then reviewed annually as part of Annual Unit Planning, in which the results may serve as the basis for actions and, if applicable, resource allocation, and are aligned with college goals and objectives.
The AARR summary link provides an aggregate of the results of the most recent AARR implementation. The AARR results by SLO link provides a more detailed view, including the specific ratings assigned by faculty to each randomly assigned course SLO, and what, if any, actions were taken.
Note: Established thresholds (i.e., green/yellow/red indicators) have yet to be developed for SLO data.
In your program review process, you may want to refer to the goals and actions in your Annual Unit Plans since your last Program Review. Follow this this link to access your previous AUP submissions. For Faculty support, please contact Veronica Lopez at lopezv@arc.losrios.edu.