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ERIC ED486432: State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions. Issue Brief PDF

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Issue Brief State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions By Jane Armstrong Introduction communicating and acting on January 2005 information.1 This issue brief focuses on what increasingly are seen as the major The fastest-growing jobs will require stumbling blocks that students some education beyond high school. face in high school and in enrolling in Jobs requiring a bachelor’s degree will postsecondary education. It summarizes grow by 32%, and jobs requiring a mas- recommendations from several national ter’s degree will grow by 23%.2 Jobs reports and conference proceedings on that require more education also pay how high schools should be redesigned better. For 2000, the average annual and how the transition to postsecondary salary for workers ages 25 and older education can be made more seamless without a high school degree was for students. This brief also provides $21,400, for high school graduates it several examples of what state leaders was $28,800, jumping to $46,300 a year are doing to deal with these issues and for workers with a bachelor’s degree.3 some sources for additional information. Experts are now calling for all students to have a minimum of a solid high Workforce Readiness school education and two years of post- secondary education, if they are to be Business leaders, educators – now successful in a workforce requiring policymakers – are insisting that more advanced skills. students leave school with the Experts are now call- skills needed to be successful in today’s But this is easier said than done. A ing for all students to knowledge-based economy. The stakes number of studies and recent reports are high. America’s competitive edge in indicate too many high school students have a minimum of a the global economy, the strength and graduate without the skills or course- solid high school versatility of its labor force, its capacity work needed to succeed in college. education and two to nourish research and innovation Without a strong college-prep curricu- years of postsec- increasingly depend on an education lum, students have difficulty navigating ondary education, if system capable of producing a steady the transition to postsecondary supply of well-prepared young people. education. they are to be suc- cessful in a workforce According to a new RAND report, The Some statistics tell the story. Nearly all requiring more 21st Century at Work, rapid technologi- high school students aspire to attend advanced skills. cal change and increased international college (97%), yet just 60% have the competition place the spotlight on the minimum credits required for admission. skills and preparation of the workforce, Yet of the 63% of high school students particularly the ability to adapt to chang- who do make it to college, more than a ing technologies and shifting product quarter of these students must take demand. The growing importance of remedial coursework.4Although more knowledge-based work favors workers students today begin college than 20 with the skills of abstract reasoning, years ago, greater proportions are not problem solving, communication and graduating. Obviously, the pipeline has collaboration. Knowledge workers will troubling gaps, disconnects and need high-level skills for managing, weaknesses. interpreting, validating, transforming, Education Commission of the States 1 State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions How Well Are High Schools Educating Students? The first stumbling block is many • Too few high school students take high schools are not doing a good challenging courses. job in educating – and graduating • Most high school exit exams do – all their students. not measure what matters to col- leges and employers.7 According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), stu- dent achievement gains in high school Problems also exist in the pipeline from high school to college. For every 100 are uneven or have leveled off:5 students who enter 9th grade, only 67 graduate from high school, 38 enroll in • Since 1992, the average science college, 26 are still enrolled in college scores of 17-year-olds have after their sophomore year, and only 18 remained essentially unchanged. graduate with either an associate’s or • Reading scores for 17-year-olds baccalaureate degree within six years of were slightly lower between 1986 graduating from high school.8The num- and 1999. bers are even worse for low-income stu- • Achievement gaps were largely dents and for African American and unchanged in the past 10 years. Hispanic Americans, the fastest-growing proportion of the youth cohort. Only 18% of African Americans and 9% of Anew ACTreport, Crisis at the Core, Hispanics have earned a bachelor’s reports that average composite ACT degree.9The only way to increase the For every 100 scores — a measure of high school number of students who complete post- students who enter preparation — have remained the same secondary education is to improve the or declined during the past five years.6 9th grade, only 67 pipeline linking high school, postsec- Just 22% of ACT-tested high school graduate from high ondary and “second-chance” education graduates meet all three of ACT’s school, 38 enroll in systems. College Readiness Benchmarks. These college, 26 are still benchmarks represent the level of enrolled in college achievement required for students to have a high probability of success in after their sophomore college biology, algebra and English year, and only 18 composition. graduate with either an associate’s or bac- According to a recent report from the calaureate degree American Diploma Project, for too many graduates, a high school diploma does within six years of not represent adequate preparation for graduating from high the intellectual demands of college or school. work; it is merely a certificate of atten- dance. The project identified these problems with high schools and/or their graduates: • Most high school graduates need remedial help in college. • Most college students never attain a degree. • Most employers say high school graduates lack basic skills. 2 Education Commission of the States State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions What State Education Leaders Can Do These issues clearly are getting students’transition from high school to students need to begin credit- attention. The U.S. Department of postsecondary education. For example: bearing courses. Education is sponsoring an initia- • Enact dual-enrollment programs tive called Preparing America’s Future Increasing Accountability for Student so high school students can earn High School. The next governors’edu- Performance college credit, either by enrolling in cation summit in February 2005 will • Administer end-of-course exams college-endorsed classes taught focus on high school reform. These and require a passing score to by their high school teachers or by actions are coupled with a number of receive credit toward graduation. taking those classes on college reports10 that make recommendations • Use high school graduation exams campuses or though a distance- for reforming high schools and aligning to ensure students meet standards learning provider. the education system to make the tran- to receive a high school diploma. • Expand Advanced Placement or sition to college more seamless for • Develop and fund statewide reme- other high-quality college-level students. Asynthesis of key recommen- dial programs to help students programs in high schools. dations for policymaker attention pass high school exit exams. includes the following: • Create middle-college programs • Test every student at least once in where students who complete a Supporting High School Innovation grades 10-12 in reading/language core high school curriculum by • Provide a venture capital fund for arts, mathematics and science as age 16 can attend two years of districts to develop new types of required by the No Child Left high school on a college campus. high schools and new high school Behind Act. Include graduation • Develop financial and other incen- courses. Districts could apply for rates as a second indicator and tives that will reward high schools start-up funds to design and report annual results on adequate and postsecondary institutions for organize new high school models. yearly progress for schools and students’successful progression districts. • Create small high schools in to and through college. grades 9-12. • Use performance measures to • Create data systems that hold assess students’work and post- • Use school choice or charter both high schools and postsec- secondary-related skills. schools to create more effective ondary institutions accountable for high schools. • Award advanced high school diplo- how well they help students mas to students who complete achieve a postsecondary creden- Strengthening the High School additional coursework, achieve tial by age 26. Curriculum high test scores or graduate with a • Create a P-16 council to analyze • Align high school academic stan- specified gradepoint average. data, align policies and put pro- dards – and exit standards – with • Provide incentives to reduce the grams in place to ensure academ- the knowledge and skills required number of dropouts. ic success at every grade. for college and workplace • Ask colleges to collect and report success. evidence of school and district Building the Capacity of High • Require all students to take a col- performance based on success of Schools ToTeach All Students lege-prep curriculum (four years of their students. to Higher Standards English, three years of math, three • Create incentives for successful • Hold postsecondary institutions years of natural science, three teachers to share their knowledge accountable for students receiving years of social studies and two and skills at increasing student a degree. years of a second language). achievement with at-risk students. Ensure there are quality teachers to teach these courses. Bridging the Gap Between High • Develop programs for higher edu- School and Postsecondary cation faculty to deliver content- • Provide flexibility to districts to link Education rich renewal courses or institutes students’educational progression • Use high school assessments for for teachers. to their academic performance college admissions, placement • Ensure opportunities for high rather than just to the courses and/or the awarding of scholar- school leaders to learn from the they’ve taken. ships. This means higher educa- successes of others who have tion leaders need to agree on a developed successful high school State education leaders then can look at common definition of the skills programs. policies and programs that help bridge Education Commission of the States 3 State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions What States Are Doing State leaders already are taking Strengthening the High School dent readiness for postsecondary action. Many states are out in Curriculum education and reduce the remedi- front of this issue and have imple- • Through its Advanced Placement ation high school graduates need. mented many of the above policy rec- Incentive Program, Oklahoma ommendations. To provide ideas and awards grants to school districts Bridging the Gap Between High policy options to state education lead- that support APand/or School and Postsecondary ers, short examples follow. International Baccalaureate cours- Education es though “vertical teams.” Vertical • New Mexico requires next-step Supporting High School Innovation teams are composed of high plans for high school students in • Under Governor Mark Warner’s school and college faculty and are which the students set personal Senior Year Plus initiative, a expected to improve the articula- post-graduation goals. The law Virtual Advanced Placement (AP) tion between high school and requires a final next-step plan as a School will provide Virginia high postsecondary education. prerequisite for graduation. school students with access to a • California has developed a model • Texas has established the Middle broader range of APcourses via curriculum framework for imple- College Education Program to existing distance-learning net- mentation of career and technical serve students who are at risk of works, regardless of where the education courses that meet state- dropping out of high school or who students live. An Electronic adopted standards, as well as sat- wish to complete high school at an Bulletin Board will show how any isfying high school graduation and accelerated pace. student can earn college credits college admissions requirements. while in high school, through • North Carolina has established Advanced Placement, • Indiana has created a Web-based Innovative Education Initiatives to International Baccalaureate, dual career planning tool for high develop cooperative efforts enrollment and other options. A school students. Students start by between secondary schools and statewide coordinator, “virtual” identifying a specific career, career institutions of higher education. counselors, and school-based focus area or career cluster. When The goals are to reduce dropout career guidance and academic a career is selected, the high rates, increase high school and advising software will support the school course sequence for college graduation rates, and Senior Year Plus initiative. grades 9-12 is identified for each decrease the need for remedial student. The state is revising the programs in higher education. In • Florida has passed legislation that content of its graduation exam and addition, North Carolina encour- limits the total number of students its Core 40 end-of-course assess- ages early entry of motivated stu- in elementary, middle and high ments to reflect the knowledge dents into four-year college schools “to reduce anonymity of and skills needed for success in programs. students in large schools.” Schools postsecondary education or that exceed these numbers are • California recently has estab- employment after high school. required to subdivide schools into lished a program to assist commu- “schools-within-a-school.” These nity college students who want to Increasing Accountability for Student schools are encouraged to use earn baccalaureate degrees at a Performance flexible scheduling, team planning, California State University cam- • Oklahoma has passed a bill that and curricular and instructional pus. The chancellor of the system adds “attainment of competencies” innovation to organize groups of is to establish lower-division trans- as a method of satisfying high students with groups of teachers fer requirements for each high- school-core course requirements. to make smaller units. demand baccalaureate program. Proficiency is demonstrated • California has reduced the local • Washington now requires the through testing (or some other matching fund requirement to 40% Higher Education Coordinating means) as an alternative to seat of project costs on a pilot-program Board, the superintendent of pub- time. basis for the construction of high lic instruction and the State Board • Arkansas requires postsecondary schools meeting certain criteria. for Community and Technical education institutions to report on This legislation also provides addi- Colleges to convene a work group high school students’readiness for tional modernization funds for larg- to discuss standards and expecta- higher education. The state er high schools to reconfigure into tions for the knowledge and skills requires schools and districts to two or more smaller schools. high school graduates need for develop strategies to improve stu- college-level work and strategies 4 Education Commission of the States State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions for communicating those stan- Resources and Additional Information dards to all Washington high schools. For a recent report card on state To learn more how states and regions Building the Capacity of High higher education systems, see the develop more aligned and equitable Schools To Teach All Students National Center for Public Policy policies that help students prepare for to Higher Standards and Higher Education’s Measuring Up and succeed in some form of postsec- • North Carolina has established a 2004: The State-by-State Report Card ondary education, see the Bridge Teacher Academy that employs for Higher Education at Project’s report, Betraying the College teachers to assist in developing http://measuringup.highereducation.org. Dream, at and delivering high-quality profes- http://www.stanford.edu/group/bridge- sional development to other teach- project/. The American Diploma Project has ers during the summer. Additional developed English and mathematics follow-up with teachers during the To learn more about the Jobs for the benchmarks that high school graduates school year helps assure imple- Future project on Redesigning High should have, along with an action agen- mentation of knowledge and skills Schools: The Unfinished Agenda in da. These are described in Ready or gained in the summer programs. State Education Reform, go to Not: Creating a High School Diploma http://www.jff.org/jff/approaches/ia_youth • For many years, Connecticut has That Counts, available at trans.html. extended professional develop- http://www.achieve.org/achieve.nsf/Ame The Education Trust has a number of ment training to teachers using ricanDiplomaProject?openform. reports documenting student achieve- university faculty to deliver special- ment gains and the need for a stronger ized content, especially in the sci- ACThas released a new report, Crisis high school curriculum. ANew Core ences and mathematics. at the Core: Preparing All Students for Curriculum for All: Aiming High for Other • Virginia Governor Mark R. Warner College and Work that describes how People’s Children is available at has initiated the Virginia well high school students are prepared http://www2.edtrust.org/edtrust/Product+ Turnaround Specialist Program to succeed in college. The report is Catalog/Reports+and+Publications.htm. that will prepare school principals, available at through an executive education http://www.act.org/path/policy/pdf/cri- To learn more about the U.S. program at the University of sis_report.pdf Department of Education’s Preparing Virginia, to turn around consistent- America’s Future High School Initiative, ly low-performing and hard-to-staff To learn more about how to make the visit http://www.ed.gov/highschool. schools. senior year more meaningful, see the National Commission on the High To learn more about state policies and School Senior Year report, The Lost programs related to high school reform, Opportunity of Senior Year: Finding a go to http://www.ecs.org/highschool. Better Way at http://www.woodrow.org/CommissionOn TheSeniorYear/Senior_Year_Report_Fin al.pdf. Jane Armstrong is an ECS senior policy advisor. Education Commission of the States 5 State Strategies for Redesigning High Schools and Promoting High School to College Transitions Endnotes 1 Lynn Karoly and Constantijn Panis. Education at Degree Granting Post- 8 Peter T. Ewell, Dennis M. Jones and The 21st Century at Work. RAND, Secondary Institutions in Fall 2000, Patrick J. Kelly. Conceptualizing and 2004. 2001. Researching the Education Pipeline. National Center for Higher Education 2 Bureau of the Census. Occupational 5 National Center for Education Management Systems, 2003. Outlook Quarterly, Winter 2001-02. Statistics. NAEP1999 Trends in Academic Progress: Three Decades of 9 National Center for Higher Education 3 Bureau of Labor Statistics. Student Performance, 2002. Management Systems. Racial and Occupational Outlook Quarterly, Spring Ethnic Representation from High School 2002. 6ACT. Crisis at the Core: Preparing All to College Completion, by State, 2000. Students for College and Work, 2004. 4 National Center for Education 10 See the reports included in the Statistics. The Condition of Education, 7American Diploma Project. Ready or resources section of this issue brief. 2000. Also, see the National Center for Not: Creating a High School Diploma Education Statistics, Remedial That Counts, 2004. © 2005 by the Education Commission of the States (ECS). All rights reserved. The Education Commission of the States is a nonprofit, nationwide organization that helps state leaders shape education policy. Copies of this policy brief are available for $5 plus postage and handling from the Education Commission of the States Distribution Center, 700 Broadway, Suite 1200, Denver, CO 80203-3460; 303.299.3692. Ask for No. SI-05-02. ECS encourages its readers to share our information with others. To request permission to reprint or excerpt some of our material, please contact the ECS Communications Department at 303.299.3628 or e-mail [email protected]. Helping State Leaders Shape Education Policy Education Commission of the States Nonprofit Org. 700 Broadway, Suite 1200 U.S. POSTAGE Denver, CO 80203-3460 PAID Denver, Colorado Permit No. 153 6 Education Commission of the States

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