Nov 21, 2024  
2024-2025 Academic Catalog 
    
2024-2025 Academic Catalog

Academic Resources



College & Career Success

Please consult the complete College & Career Success Policy  for additional detail.

The Board of Regents for Higher Education directed the Connecticut State Community College, in conjunction with the CSCU System Office through the leadership of the CSCU Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs, to:

  • Require all Connecticut State Community College programs of study to include the three (3) credit CCS 1001  which is focused on college success and career exploration.
  • Require all degree-seeking students to enroll in CCS 1001  within their first nine (9) credits.
  • Ensure that CCS 1001  includes a component that meets the general education core diversity requirement, with the acknowledgement that diversity topics should ideally be embedded throughout the General Education core and across the curriculum.
  • Ensure that CCS 1001  fulfills one of the general education core competencies.
  • Make recommendations regarding which programs of study might add CCS 1001  as an exception to normalization, in accordance with BOR policy.
  • Provide guidance regarding which circumstances allow a student to request exemption from taking CCS 1001  with final decisions on exemptions made by campus academic leadership.
  • Ensure that CCS 1001  is regularly updated to align with the latest research and evidence from the field regarding successful first year experience courses, noting that current research demonstrates that the most successful first year experience courses use pedagogies that promote learning-for-application, use equity-minded pedagogies and inclusive formats, give instructors the tools and structural supports to teach effectively, and substantively link the course to other academic courses to improve transfer of learning.
  • Provide administrative oversight of CCS 1001  to ensure consistency of delivery and outcomes.

Student Exemption for CCS 1001 effective Fall 2023

The exemption only applies to two student populations: LEGACY and TRANSFER-IN students. If a student is eligible for an exemption, the student can meet with their advisor and/or Program Coordinator for substitution guidance. Aside from these two student populations, all students will be required to take CCS 1001  starting in Fall 2023. Please see the Student Exemption Procedure  for full details.

Legacy Students:

A “legacy student” is a student was enrolled in a Connecticut community college prior to Fall 2023 but did not complete a degree program, and is now enrolling in a CT State Community College degree program.

If a student has completed 24 or more college-level credits and has not taken an equivalent course (outlined in the exemption), a student will be eligible* for a course substitution.

If a student has completed any of the outlined 1 or 1.5 credit courses (as listed in the exemption) at the CT Community Colleges, the CCS 1001 requirement may be waived, and the student will be eligible* for a course substitution.

If a student has completed CCS 101 College & Career Success at any of the colleges prior to Fall 2023, that course will fulfill the CCS 1001  requirement in CT State programs.

Transfer-In Students:

If a student has completed an equivalent 3 credit course at an accredited college or university with a C- or higher, that course will be transferred in and will fulfill the CCS 1001  requirement.

If a student has NOT completed an equivalent 3 credit course at an accredited college or university but has 24 or more transferable credits with a C- or higher, the student will be eligible* for a course substitution of CCS 1001 .

 

*Please note that eligibility does not mean that a student is required to seek a substitution for CCS 1001 . In many cases, a student will benefit from taking CCS 1001  and this option needs to be discussed through the advising process.

 


Honors Programming

CT State Honors Program

The Honors Program at CT State provides students with academic enrichment to supplement their associate degree program. Throughout the cohort-based program, Honors students hone the academic, professional and interpersonal skills necessary for transfer and future academic and career success. Honors students benefit from a better teacher-to-student ratio, close faculty mentoring, special programming, independent study opportunities, and access to scholarships and unique opportunities (e.g., Honors Program students can take courses at four-year institutions in CT at no cost). As a result, most Honors Program students transfer to competitive four-year institutions (e.g., Wesleyan, Yale, Vanderbilt, NYU, Amherst College, UConn, etc) with significant scholarships.

The Honors Program is flexible enough to fit with most degree programs and students can use Honors Program courses to fulfill general education requirements. An Honors Program is offered on several CT State campuses. Students can apply for acceptance into the Honors Program on any campus that has one even if it is not their home campus and students do not have to switch their home campus if accepted into an honors program on a different campus. More information as well as the application can be found at www.ctstate.edu/honors

Additionally, the Business Administration program offers an honors degree. This program focuses on the business core as well as an emphasis on critical Math curricula. A minimum GPA of 3.4 is required for this option.

Honors courses

CT State offers students the opportunity to apply to take an honors course (e.g., Composition Honors, General Psychology Honors, U.S. History Honors) without being a member of the Honors Program.  Honors courses can be found in the course catalog with the designation “H” after the course code (e.g. ENG 1010H - Composition Honors). Students must have a minimum 3.25 CT State GPA to be accepted into an honors course. Interested students can email the Honors Program coordinator on the campus at which the course of interest is being offered. More information can be found at www.ctstate.edu/honors


Academic Advising

Academic advising assists students in establishing and achieving their academic, career, and transfer goals. CT State students have access to both trained professional advisors (Guided Pathways Advisors) as well as faculty content experts (Faculty Advisors). Students should meet with their advisor(s) at least once per semester and more often as needed. General information about advising and campus contacts are available on the CT State Advising webpage. Students are assigned specific advisors during their first semester; these are noted on their degree audits in the myCTState portal.

Faculty Advising

All full-time faculty engage in academic advising and provide advising to students within their specific program(s) or discipline. Faculty are the foremost experts on their specific discipline or program and play an integral role in supporting the student’s academic, career, and transfer planning. Students should connect with their assigned faculty advisor to discuss program options and details about the curriculum, student learning outcomes, and specifics of the degree or certificate program.

Guided Pathways Advising

Mission Statement

All community college students, from initial registration to completion, are supported by Guided Pathways Advisors to establish academic and career goals, receive proactive and individualized academic and holistic supports that result in the timely and equitable completion of credentials that lead to employment, transfer, and family sustainable wages.

Vision

Guided Pathways Advising is a dynamic, student-centered, holistic approach grounded in student development and learning. Guided Pathways Advisors align advising practices with the diverse and unique needs of each individual student in their caseload. GPAs advise, advocate, mentor, support, and coach their caseload to reach their individual goals.

Guiding Principles

  • Students receive deliberate and personalized supports necessary to contribute to their success inside and outside the classroom.  
  • Guided Pathways Advisors pledge to empower students and staff to advance racial, social, and economic justice while identifying and responding to student barriers.
  • Student voices are amplified by honoring lived experiences and by highlighting their unique assets to develop meaningful advising relationships.
 

Instructional Methods

Connecticut State Community College offers the following course types to address learning, scheduling, and safety considerations for all in our educational community.

Hyflex (FLEX)
This course delivery method provides students with the most flexibility. In the Hyflex course design, students can:

  • Choose to attend face-to-face, classroom- based synchronous class sessions (TRAD), or
  • Choose to participate in synchronous live remote online sessions presented via WebEx, Teams, or Collaborate, without physically attending class (LRON), or
Complete part, or all, of the course instruction asynchronously, without attending scheduled live sessions (either on-ground or remotely) (ONLN).
 
Hybrid (HYBR)
Combines synchronous on-ground or remote instruction and asynchronous online instruction. This course method is for courses that have required hands-on components that cannot be accomplished online or asynchronously, for example: labs, manufacturing, clinical, technology, or digital arts courses. Students will be required to attend scheduled class sessions on-ground or remotely as noted in the schedule. 
 
Live Remote On-Ground (LRCR)
This course delivery method requires students to attend a synchronous class at a specified time and day as noted in the schedule but allows students to take a course partially onsite and partially live remote online (via video conference). Students will have the option of attending class on-ground or continuing to participate via live online remote. Classes may make use of Blackboard, but instruction is delivered in real-time.
 
Live Remote Online (LRON)
Live synchronous online sessions are held at specified times using Teams/WebEx/Collaborate. Classes may make use of Blackboard, but instruction is delivered in real-time as noted in the schedule.
 
Online with Campus Requirements (OLCR)
All instruction is asynchronous like ONLN but requires a synchronous, on-ground orientation and/or real-time proctored assessments.
 
Online (ONLN)
Courses in which all instruction and assessment is delivered asynchronously through Blackboard-often in conjunction with publisher-based content. These courses include discussion boards, assignments, projects, assessments, etc. Courses designated as ONLN have completely asynchronous instruction, as well as asynchronous assessment.
 
Traditional (TRAD)
Includes synchronous on-ground classroom-based instruction, as well as sections coded with other instructional codes for classroom-based instruction like Lab, Clinical, Co-op. Classes may make use of Blackboard, but instruction is delivered in real-time as noted in the schedule.
 
Addtional details about these instructional methods and the technology that students need to have for each are available in this specification document.  

Tutoring Services

Tutoring is available to CT State students at their home campus or any campus where they are enrolled in classes. The Tutoring and Academic Support webpage can connect students to all campuses and their appointment scheduling tools. Additionally, there are more than 30 online student success webinars available at any time.

 


Degree Audits

Inside the myCTState portal, students have access to an audit which tracks their progress toward degree completion. The audit tracks degree requirements inlcidng general education and program courses fulfilled and GPA. Students’ assigned advisors and other information about their account status are also list on the audit.