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EPILive

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For example, CUNY College Now. Data Limitations. Few third party evaluations ... Few follow participants through college graduation or into job market ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EPILive


1
EPILive
A Presentation of the Educational Policy Institute
Stay Tuned The program will begin promptly at
100pm EST
2
  • The College Ladder Linking Secondary and
    Postsecondary Education for All Students
  • Friday, March 2, 2007
  • Moderator Watson Scott Swail, Educational Policy
    Institute
  • Guests Betsy Brand Jennifer Lerner, American
    Youth Policy Forum
  • Daniel Voloch, Coordinator, College Now, Hostos
    Community College, Bronx, NY

EPILive
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Betsy Brand
  • Director, AYPF
  • Former Assistant Secretary of Education
  • Served under former Senator Dan Quayle
  • Legislative Associate for the House Committee on
    Education and Labor from 1977 to 1983

7
Jennifer Lerner
  • Program Associate, American Youth Policy Forum
  • Graduate of Teachers College

8
Daniel Voloch
  • Coordinator of College Now at Hostos Community
    College
  • Served as the Director of the Quality of Life
    Program

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Definition
  • Secondary-Postsecondary Learning Options (SPLOs)
    are schools and programs that link secondary
    education with two- and four-year institutions of
    higher education and allow high school students
    to participate in college-level courses for
    credit and not for credit.

12
SPLO categories
  • Dual Enrollment
  • Advanced Placement
  • Institution-specific dual enrollment programs
  • Statewide dual enrollment programs
  • Tech Prep
  • Middle/Early College High Schools
  • Programs serving Disadvantaged Youth
  • For example, CUNY College Now

13
Data Limitations
  • Few third party evaluations
  • More qualitative than quantitative
  • Considered short-term outcomes (at high school
    graduation, after one semester of postsecondary
    education)
  • Few follow participants through college
    graduation or into job market
  • Difficulty accessing data from two unique systems
    (K-12 and postsecondary)

14
Summary of Outcomesfrom 22 included SPLOs
15
Highlights from Lessons Learned
  • Funding
  • Funding formulas must distribute dollars fairly,
    so that institutions are paid based on the amount
    of services they provide to students.

16
Highlights from Lessons Learned
  • Extra Supports
  • For students to be successful, SPLOs need to
    provide appropriate experiences and supports to
    their students based on their individual needs.
  • Most common extra supports
  • Caring adult advisors
  • Academic assistance and tutoring
  • College success class
  • Peer support network in safe environment

17
Highlights from Lessons Learned
  • Transferability of Credit
  • Very little data is available on what courses
    transfer for credit or how students use credit
    earned from participation in a SPLO.
  • Students often are unaware they are earning
    credit
  • Credits are often not as portable as expected
    (for example, 4-year institutions often do not
    accept credits from 2-year institutions)
  • Responsibility often falls to student to work out
    the credit transfer
  • Solutions Articulation Agreements
  • Common Course Numbering Systems

18
Unanswered questions
  • Course rigor Do SPLOs offer college-level or
    college-like courses?
  • AYPFs proxies for determining course rigor
  • program location
  • teacher and faculty preparation
  • prerequisites for participation
  • program length

19
The College Ladder
  • The College Ladder Linking Secondary and
    Postsecondary Education for Success for All
    Students is available online at
  • www.aypf.org/publications

20
Daniel Voloch
  • Coordinator of College Now at Hostos Community
    College
  • Served as the Director of the Quality of Life
    Program

21
CUNY Collaborative Programs
  • College Now GEAR UP/Middle Grades Initiative
  • Affiliated High Schools Early College Initiative
  • CUNY Prep Research Evaluation
  • Creative Arts Team Looking Both Ways

22
Fundamental College Now Goals
  • Improved high school graduation rates
  • Better preparation for college
  • Reduced need for remediation

23
College Now by the Numbers
  • College Now currently partners with 287 high
    schools.
  • In 2001-2002, 31,189 students were enrolled in
    College Now, as compared to 52,309 in 2005-2006.
  • In the fall of 2005, 46 of NYC public school
    students who entered CUNYs four-year schools had
    participated in College Now.
  • One-year retention rates are higher for College
    Now students.

24
College Now at Hostos Community College
25
College Now at Hostos Community College
  • 21 College Now partner high schools
  • Graduation rates of high schools span from 44 to
    78.5
  • Schools range from 165 1,233 students
  • Varying student populations and needs

26
College Now at Hostos Community College
  • 2003 2004 261 registrations in college-credit
    courses
  • 50.2 successful completion rate (spring 2004)
  • 2004 2005 473 registrations in college-credit
    courses
  • 70.1 successful completion rate (spring 2005)
  • 2005 2006768 registrations in college-credit
    courses 80.3 successful completion rate (spring
    2006)

27
2005-2006 Demographics
  • Hostos College Now 2006 College Now Total
  • Female 66.5 55
  • Male 32.9 44
  • Unknown 0.6 1
  • Hispanic 53.5 18.5
  • Black 28.8 22.5
  • Asian/Pacific Islander 2.8 15.7
  • White 0.8 18.9
  • Other 6.8 6.7
  • Unknown 7.3 17.7

28
College Now at Hostos Community College
  • Program Components
    (2005-2006 registrations)
  • College Credit Courses 90.8
  • Non-Credit Courses 9.2

29
College Now at Hostos Community College
  • New Initiatives
  • College-credit courses in the early afternoon
  • Young Mens Leadership Program
  • Developmental Reading courses for English
    Language Learners
  • (P)SAT Courses

30
Hostos Community College College Now Summer
Program
  • Bronx Civic Scholars Institute, a four-week
    program which offered
  • A college-credit American Government course
    which had been redeveloped to focus on case
    studies
  • A daily practicum
  • An internship at a community-based organization
    that focused on youth activism
  • Visit to City Hall, meeting with Council Member
    Robert Jackson, tour of the South Bronx with the
    director of the Bronx African-American History
    Project, presentation on environmental justice
    issues from Sustainable South Bronx

31
College Now at Hostos Community College
  • Developing Community Partnerships
  • Liberty Partnership
  • Bronx Council on the Arts
  • Urban Word
  • New Visions
  • Latin American Writers Institute
  • STEP/Proyecto Access
  • Sistas and Brothas United (SBU)
  • Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice (YMPJ)

32
Next Week
  • Next Steps for Affirmative Action
  • Mr. Ward Connerly
  • Founder Chairman, American Civil Rights
    Institute
  • Arthur Coleman
  • Partner, Holland Knight LLP, Washington, DC
  • Friday, March 9, 1pm

33
Two Weeks
  • A Marshall Plan for Higher Education
  • William G. Tierney
  • University of Southern California
  • Los Angeles, CA
  • Friday, March 16, 1pm

34
EPILive
A Presentation of the Educational Policy Institute
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