UCI Feature

Recounting her experience, Lee says, “The Academic Recovery process aided me in finding the right path for myself at UCI. Having that guidance and easy access to resources across campus was helpful in getting me to where I am, currently, in my undergraduate career.”

The new Academic Recovery initiative is part of a growing shift in attitude within the higher education landscape on the very nature of academic probation-type processes. Due to the negative stigma surrounding the word ‘probation,’ specifically for historically underrepresented students, other colleges and universities around the country, including several CSUs are discontinuing usage of the term ‘Academic Probation’. However, UC Irvine is the first UC campus to make this transition.  According to Cartagena, the term ‘Recovery’ not only carries a more positive tone, but also signals a clear separation from previous ways of thinking about this issue and best represents the new personalized, holistic response that advising offices have towards students with unsatisfactory academic standing. “Recovery is the goal,” Cartagena emphasizes, which is why Academic Recovery will individually work with students to find solutions to regain good academic standing, rather than utilizing the disciplinary contract-based method that has existed for decades. Academic Advisors had grown frustrated by a process that required them to be both the principal enforcers of policy and advocates for students affected by that policy.  The new approach focuses advising efforts on supporting students’ paths to recovering their good academic standing. Academic Recovery was ‘soft-launched’ across all departments as of Fall 2021, and while most students have been placed into the new initiative, some elements  are still being evaluated and each department still retains the use of “Probation” terminology in accordance with existing UCI Senate Regulations. An official launch of the initiative and terminology is pending further development and a review of current regulations by the Academic Senate.

Academic Recovery represents just one way UCI is empowering and enhancing the student experience into the future by harnessing data. EMA, the data tool that powers Academic Recovery, is part of Compass, a University-wide initiative dedicated to utilizing data and analytics to create a more equitable, world-class experience for every student during their time at UCI, including areas such as course enrollment, student success, support resources and more. The data that Compass EMA provides directly to administrators allows them to address student needs in a proactive manner, and is becoming an increasingly valuable asset to campus administrators as they embrace a data-driven future.

Speaking on the growth of Compass EMA, Hwang said, “The number of EMA users has expanded from just five users in a single department to now over 500 users and covers every academic unit and a steadily growing number of student support programs and administrative offices,” and that the system sees a whopping 5,000 visits per month. UCI’s efforts to meaningfully improve student-university interactions using data-driven initiatives will continue as we move into a smarter future.

Listen to the Anteater Insider Podcast episode featuring VP Patty Morales and student Ella Lee.