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Nobodys Kids

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Title: Nobodys Kids


1
Nobodys Kids
  • A look at Continuation High Schools in California
  • Milbrey McLaughlin
  • Jorge Ruiz de Velasco
  • Stanford University
  • Education Writers Association April 26 2008

2
Continuation High Schools in CA Overview
  • Provide an alternative path to high school
    graduation for students at risk of dropping out
  • Enroll 116,000 students in 520 continuation high
    schools in every corner of the state- 16-18
    years old
  • State imposes roughly the same graduation
    standards on continuation students (course of
    study exit exam mastery of curriculum
    standards)
  • At local level, schools are highly variable in
    terms of their quality, focus and outcomes

3
Students face many challengesacademic and
nonacademic
  • Serve an extremely vulnerable student population
    who come both voluntarily and involuntarily.
  • Credit deficient, chronically absent, lacking
    fundamental skills, disengaged from school
  • English Language Learners concentration of
    ethnic/racial minorities
  • Youth with behavioral challenges mental health
    issues, drug use, weapons, fighting, family
    dysfunctions
  • System kids foster care, group homes,
    shelters, juvenile justice

4
Continuation High Schools vary on key dimensions
  • Size and physical spacesmall, poorly resourced
    to new, modern facilities
  • Staffingdumping ground or committed staff
  • Leadership benign neglect or commitment to AE
    student population
  • Curriculum and instruction packets v.
    student-centered, rigorous instruction
  • Supports few v. rich array of academic/non-academ
    ic resources
  • Partnerships few v. variety of connections to
    work, the community, other youth-serving
    institutions

5
How do Continuation High Schools perform?
  • Difficult to ascertainlack of longitudinal,
    comparable or comprehensive data on outcomes
  • Continuation students score lower on virtually
    all measures of academic performance STAR,
    CASHEE, API
  • Some continuation high schools do better than
    others in terms of student retention, performance
    and graduation

6
Qualities Practices of schools with good
student outcomes
  • Serve 250 or more studentslarge enough to have
    academic depth
  • Intentional focus on post-secondary pathways
  • Student-centered instruction high expectations
    for students and teachers
  • Use data to monitor student experiences guide
    change
  • Provide range of academic and non academic
    supports

7
Factors associated with strong continuation high
schools
  • Leadership committed to alternative education at
    school and district levels
  • Political support in the community school board
    members, county board of supervisors
  • Active partnerships with youth-serving CBOs,
    county agencies, higher education and the private
    sector

8
Issues of concern
  • Little to no public accountability for these
    youththey too often are lost
  • Students often are seen as Throw away kids
    Nobodys kidsfew effective advocates
  • Negative public perceptions of both students and
    the schools constrain resources and opportunities
  • Educational options are not really alternative
  • Insufficient supports and opportunities both for
    youth and the adults who work with them

9
Different district county contexts for
continuation high schools
  • Benign neglect 10 acceptable loss kids v
    active political support for alternative
    education schools and students
  • Conceptions of continuation students a problem
    to be managed or young people in need of
    different resources and opportunities
  • Intentional youth development stance effort to
    coordinate services/resources across
    youth-serving institutions v. Balkanized youth
    policy context

10
How different system contexts mattered for
continuation high schools
  • Relationships with foster care, mental health,
    juvenile justice other youth-serving agencies
    proactive, supportive or siloed
  • Level of resources and services available to
    continuation programs and students equitable or
    bottom of the food chain
  • Coherence and articulation of resources and
    opportunities available to continuation high
    schools institutional train wreck or safety
    net?

11
Factors affecting county district contexts
  • Local economy
  • Personal networks relationships
  • Leadership political support for CHS mission
    and students
  • History of collaboration
  • Express commitment to a youth development stance
    and continuum of care

12
State constraints on local action
  • Accountability structures proceduresgoal
    ambiguity and weak school-level accountability
  • School finance structure highly centralized,
    undifferentiated by school type
  • Staffing and services staffing driven by PPE,
    undifferentiated by school type
  • Continuation high schools treated as small
    traditional high school, not an alternative
    educational setting
  • No youth policy or data system

13
What do we need to know?
  • What happens to young people who enter
    continuation schools?
  • What academic supports do these students need to
    succeed? Quality? Sufficiency? Targeted?
  • What non-academic resources are needed by youth
    in continuation high schools? Local/regional
    exemplars?
  • How does demand for alternative education square
    with supply? Targeted age group? Older and
    younger youth?
  • What resources are needed/available to faculty
    and leaders at continuation high schools?
  • Is the state sufficiently clear about the goals
    held for continuation schools and the vulnerable
    students they serve?

14
Want technical reports?Visit the John Gardner
Center Websitehttp//jcg.stanford.eduHave
Questions? Contact us
  • Milbrey McLaughlin Milbrey_at_stanford.edu
  • Jorge Ruiz de Velasco jvelasco_at_law.berkeley.ed
    u
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