Lexicon - Definitions - C
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CAA (See Comprehensive Articulation Agreement)
CABINET
The President's Cabinet is composed of the President, the Executive
Vice-President, all Vice-Presidents, the Assistant to the President for
Community Relations, and the Assistant to the President. The Cabinet
meets weekly, usually on Monday morning.
CAL
Former name of CPCC's computerized database of library holdings in all CPCC
locations. See CLICK.
CAMPUS COMPACT
N.C. Campus
Compact (NCCC), a coalition colleges united around the civic mission of
higher education, was formed in the fall of 2002 by fifteen N.C. higher
education presidents. Initial organizational goals focus on providing
opportunities for students, faculty, and staff to develop a civic ethic,
developing a network of service-learning practitioners to share resources and
expand strategies, and integrating service-learning into higher education
curricula. For more information, visit the
N.C. Campus Compact home page.
CAPS FEE
Campus Access, Parking, and
Security (CAPS) Fee is paid by all students based on the number of
semester hours for which they are registered. Each student receives a parking
permit.
CATALOG YEAR
The year in which a student began his or her program of study in a particular
degree, diploma, or certificate program.
CCE (see Corporate and Continuing Education)
CCL (see Common Course Library)
CENTER FOR SUSTAINABILITY
A project of the Futures Institute, the
CFS is CPCC's response to the powerful and growing trend of environmental sustainability.
The CFS was a key advocate for and organizer of the
campus wildlife habitat initiative. Other initiatives are described at
the CFS website.
CENTER FOR TRANSFORMATIONAL LEARNING
The Center for Transformational Learning is the coordinator of faculty
development at CPCC. The center provides resources for individual faculty,
administrators, department, and programs in professional and personal
enrichment. The center develops and directs faculty orientations, mentorships, internships, workshops, teleconferences, and conferences.
Drawing on the resources of the College, the center provides information,
technical training, and leadership training.
CENTRAL HIGH
Central Campus building formerly known as Garinger Hall (1978-2002) and
Old Central (1963-1978). The original CPCC building. Houses Registration,
Student Success Center, Gayle Simmons Career Center, Ruth Shaw Academic Center,
Cashier's Office, Testing Center, Counseling, classrooms, faculty offices,
etc.
CERTIFICATE
See Certificate of Completion, Short-Term Training Certificate,
Curriculum Certificate
CERTIFICATE of COMPLETION
A document issued to a student in
a noncredit course indicating that the student has successfully completed the
course, for example, Real Estate License Examination Review.
C.E.U.
Continuing Education Unit is earned in courses offered through Corporate and
Continuing Education. This unit of credit cannot count toward college
curriculum credit.
CFIT
College Facilities Implementation Team implements the details for new and
changed uses of existing facilities; recommends broad uses for planned and
future facilities; recommends needs for additional space; and communicates
with individual project planning teams.
CHARLOTTE READS
A literacy initiative of Advantage Carolina focusing on Bright Beginnings,
Family Literacy, Workplace Basic Skills, and Reach Out and Read programs.
CHARLOTTE RESOLVES II
An organization that explores opportunities for collaboration among the six
largest governmental institutions in Charlotte-Mecklenburg. Members
include Carolinas HealthCare System, CPCC, Charlotte Housing Authority, CMS,
City of Charlotte, and Mecklenburg County. The purpose is to forge
alliances while striving to serve their same customers-children, families,
and adults who live in disadvantaged communities.
CHAT ROOM
An online service that allows people to carry on a real-time conversation by
typing messages to each other at their computers.
CHIEF ACADEMIC OFFICER (CAO)
The person at the local college level who bears the primary responsibility
for all areas of curriculum programming. At CPCC the CAO is the Vice
President for Instruction.
CHRONICLE
The Chronicle of Higher Education is a professional publication for
educators. Most U.S. colleges, including CPCC, advertise full-time
faculty and administrative positions in the weekly publication. For
free highlights of community college news.
CITY VIEW CENTER
City View Center was the first of the learning centers established by the
College in 1979 as a way to make education more accessible to the
community. Originally in Freedom Mall, it was called College Mart and
later the West Area Learning Center. In 1990,
it was relocated to a storefront on Freedom Drive and in 1996, it was moved to Alleghany
Street at Ashley Road and renamed City View Center. It houses
classrooms, computer labs, and TRIO programs.
CISCO
The name of the company that provides computer network training. Cisco
Certified Network Associate teaches entry-level IT employees cabling, and
networking using CISCO routers and equipment. Cisco Certified Network
Professional is a higher-level certificate that can only be obtained after
completing the entry-level course.
CLASSIFICATION OF INSTRUCTIONAL PROGRAMS CODE (CIP CODES)
Nationally recognized codes to
classify instructional programs for educational research and funding
purposes.
CLASSIFIED EMPLOYEES
Nonexempt employees who work a 40-hour week, documented by a monthly time
re-cap sheet. Nonexempt employees are prevented from working more than
40 hours per week with overtime compensation.
CLAUDIA WATKINS BELK BUILDING
The Claudia Watkins Belk Building Center for Justice on the North Campus is
named for Judge Claudia Watkins Belk and houses the Public Safety
Program.
CLEP
College Level Examination Program. CPCC is a national test center for administering
CLEP exams.
CLAYTOR
The Claytor Building on the North Campus is named for Charlotte attorney Bill
Claytor, who served on the CPCC Board of Trustees from 1977-1993 and was
chairman from 1984-1993.
CLICK
CPCC's Library Information Catalog for Knowledge (CLICK)
is the library database of books, databases, journals, magazines, newspapers,
e-resources, and other resources. The CLICK icon is a jester.
CMS
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. The city of Charlotte and the
county of Mecklenburg have a combined public school system with one school
board elected by the registered voters.
COD
Course Origination Document is an online form used to generate a class
offering. The originator inputs all pertinent information that is
needed for the Class Schedule.
COLLEAGUE
Colleague is the College’s management information system,
a software package with enhancements and ancillary third-party products
designed to interconnect the functions at the college level and to manage
processes that are shared by the colleges and the System Office.
Sometimes employees
refer to it as Datatel. The first component of
the system for financials was followed by one for human resources. In
2006, the student component was deployed. Colleague is a
product of Datatel. From the Datatel website:
Colleague includes four integrated systems – the Student,Financial, Human Resource, and
Institutional Advancement Systems – which provide an enterprise-wide
solution. The Core System is at the center of Colleague’s integration, providing a
central location for information, workflow development, and processing
rules used throughout Colleague.
WebAdvisor, Datatel’s Web solution, also uses the Colleague business
rules. While each of Colleague’s specialized systems can operate in a stand-alone
environment, the integration of several or all of the systems provides
Clients with the capability to share information campus-wide.
COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT
The process of
planning and building a useful and coherent collection of library materials
over a period of years, based on assessment of the needs of the library’s
clientele and analysis of previous usage, and normally constrained by budget
allocations for new materials.
COLLEGE ADMINISTRATION BUILDING
Four brick buildings
between Third and Fourth Streets that house most college administrative
offices. Formerly called Colony Court.
COLLEGE EXPERIENCE
This program allows
high school seniors to come to CPCC to take pre-approved courses. In
most cases, high school students are dismissed from their last period class
in order to come to the College. Books are paid for by CPCC. High school
students are not charged tuition
COLLEGE INFORMATION SYSTEM (CIS)
A two-part system to interconnect all facets of
NCCCS records –
commonly differentiated as Colleague and Data Warehouse.
COLLEGE TRANSFER PROGRAMS
The programs intended for transfer to senior institutions including the
Associate in Arts, Associate in Science, and Associate in Fine Arts.
COLLEGE VISITATION DAY
Usually held annually in November when representatives from many
four-year colleges and universities and representatives of the armed
services are available to CPCC students to provide information.
COMBINED COURSE
LIBRARY (CCL)
The set of statewide uniform courses from
which North Carolina community colleges must choose their curriculum course
offerings. The Combined Course Library contains all approved courses of the North Carolina
Community College System. A college cannot offer unapproved
courses. Colleges are not allowed to alter course titles, contact
hours, credit hours, or course descriptions (except they may add a fourth
sentence to provide local information). A college may request that a
new course be added to the CCL.
Combined Course Library is a catalog of all courses that may be taught in North
Carolina community colleges. There is a procedure for requesting
additions or changes to the CCL. A course that is in the CCL does not
make it automatically eligible to be in the CPCC catalog. CPCC courses
must also be approved by the Curriculum Committee of the College Senate. For
more information, visit the
NCCCS
website.
COMMON CORE
COURSES
Those courses that have been identified as part of a guaranteed transfer
articulation with the University of North Carolina system. See Comprehensive
Articulation Agreement.
COMMON COURSE LIBRARY (CCL)
See Combined Course Library.
COMPENSATORY EDUCATION
This program provides
classes for students who have special learning needs due to a developmental
disability or traumatic brain injury. The primary emphasis is on the basic
life skills needed for successful employment and independent living.
COMPETENCY TESTING
A test that assesses a test taker’s level of knowledge or skill in some defined
domain.
COMPREHENSIVE ARTICULATION AGREEMENT (CAA)
An agreement between the North Carolina Community College System and
public and private universities to facilitate transfer between community
colleges and 4-year universities. The Comprehensive Articulation Agreement (CAA) addresses the
transfer of credits between institutions in the North Carolina Community
College System and from that system to constituent institutions of the
University of North Carolina. It does not address admission to an
institution nor to a specific major within an institution. The CAA
applies to all North Carolina community colleges and all constituent
institutions of the University of North Carolina. The CAA enables North
Carolina community college graduates of two-year associate in arts and
associate in science degree programs who are admitted to constituent
institutions of the University of North Carolina to transfer with junior
status. For more information, visit the
CAA website.
COMPRESSED DEGREE
An intense, two-year evening program designed to offer the Associate in
Arts degree in compressed form (8-week classes).
CONCURRENT ENROLLMENT
Enrollment of high school students in regular college courses, usually
located on the community college campus. With permission from the high school, a high school student may take a course(s)
at CPCC while concurrently still a high school student.
More.
CONTACT HOURS
Actual number of hours of a class or the actual number of hours a student spends
on an activity.
CONTENT MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM
A
content management system (CMS) is a computer software system for
organizing and facilitating collaborative creation of World Wide Web
documents. An example is Plone, which the
College has adopted for its Internet presence.
CONTINUING
EDUCATION
A part of the lifelong learning mission of NCCCS, these programs provide
opportunities for specific job training or retraining, basic skills
education and improved use of leisure time.
CONTINUING
EDUCATION UNIT (C.E.U.)
A unit of credit toward specific certification awarded for continuing
education courses in collaboration with the certifying agency.
COOPERATIVE EDUCATION (CO-OP)
Cooperative Education is an academic program that integrates classroom studies
with practical experience in business, industry, public and community agency work
situations. The Co-Op experience is concurrent with or in alternation with academic
studies, may be paid or unpaid, and awards students academic credit.
CORPORATE AND
CONTINUING EDUCATION (CCE)
A division of CPCC that offers continuing education and extension courses for
local businesses, for upgrading skills, or for personal enrichment. These
courses have 7000-8000 numbers; some offer C.E.U.’s. CCE offers most
of the College's noncredit courses and programs. Most offices are
located at West Campus, where Mary Vickers-Koch is the dean.
However, there are noncredit courses and programs in other instructional
groups, supervised by other deans.
COREQUISITE
A course that must be taken during the same term as the course that required
the corequisite.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
A brief description of what is taught in the course and what the student
should be able to do upon completion. Classroom hours, laboratory hours,
clinic or co-op hours, credits earned, and prerequisite/corequisite (if
needed) are listed.
COURSE PREFIX
Three letters preceding a course number. The course prefix is usually an
abbreviation of the type of course; i.e., RED for a reading course.
CP LEADS
A professional development institute at CPCC to help shape future College leaders.
CP Leads is usually a 35-hour program reviewing administrative and leadership
skills.
It is usually offered twice a year, by invitation only. Diann Back coordinates
this program.
CREDIT
The number of units earned upon completing a curriculum course, measured in
semester hours.
CREDIT BY EXAMINATION
A written, oral , or performance examination by an instructor to test special
aptitude or knowledge of course material in lieu of taking the course. Students who score
satisfactorily are given a grade of X. The grade carries no quality points, but credit
hours are given identical to the number normally assigned to that course.
CROSSWALK
Matching courses offered under the old quarter system (prior to 1997) with courses
offered under the current semester system in order to document student credit hours.
CURRICULUM (also
called a Program)
A set of courses designed to prepare a student either to enter the workforce
immediately upon completion or to transfer to a degree program at a four-year
college or university. Depending upon the length of the program, a degree,
diploma, or certificate is awarded upon completion.
CURRICULUM CERTIFICATE
Curriculum certificate
programs are curriculum programs of study that are 12 - 18 credit hours in
length and are offered under a state-approved certificate, degree, or diploma
program. The certificates are awarded by the Graduation Office and they are
noted on a student's transcript. If a certificate meets all financial aid
requirements, then a student enrolled in that program may receive financial
aid for their coursework.
A
student may earn certificates that build to earning a diploma or degree.
A student may earn a certificate(s) in the same semester that he or she
earns a degree or diploma if the following conditions have been
fulfilled:
-
Official copies of all high
school and college transcripts are in the student’s folder at CPCC
(when this is a certificate requirement).
-
Completion of required
courses in the student’s program of study.
-
The final thirty percent
(30%) of credits earned must be from CPCC.
-
A cumulative CPA of 2.0 or
higher. (see p. 86 2003-04 catalog)
CURRICULUM IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (CIP)
A two-year project with state-wide representation to assess the current
employer needs for a particular program area and revise courses and
curriculum standards as required to meet the employer needs.
CURRICULUM REVIEW COMMITTEE
A committee of academic officers and presidents that serves as an arm of
the State Board of Community Colleges, with the specific purpose of
maintaining the curriculum courses in the Combined Course Library. This
committee is charged with the responsibility of keeping the curriculum
courses in the Combined Course Library current while guarding against
proliferation of course duplications. Also the name of
a standing committee of the
CPCC College Senate that reviews all new courses and programs
and modifications to existing ones. Recommendations are forwarded to the Vice-President
for Instruction.
CURRICULUM STANDARD
A standard for each degree or diploma curriculum program. Curriculum standards are
prepared at the state level and dictate a description of the program, required courses,
number of hours for completion, etc. All N.C. community colleges that offer a particular
degree or diploma program must abide by the same curriculum standard. See the
NCCCS
web pages.
CURRICULUM COURSE/CREDIT
All courses that carry college credit are curriculum courses. These courses are
identified with a three-digit number beginning with a 0, 1, or 2.
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