Title: American Diploma Project
1(No Transcript)
2American Diploma Project
- How well prepared are our students for the world
after high school? - What does it mean to be prepared for college and
work? - Do we expect all of our students to be prepared?
- Closing the expectations gap what will it take?
3American Diploma Project
- How well prepared are our
- students?
4A high school diploma is not the last educational
stop required
- Jobs that require at least some postsecondary
education will make up more than two-thirds of
new jobs.
Source Carnevale, Anthony P. and Donna M.
Desrochers, Standards for What? The Economic
Roots of K16 Reform, Educational Testing
Service, 2003.
5How does earning power differ between H.S.
college graduates?
- Educational Attainment Median Earnings
6Too many U.S. students drop out of the education
pipeline
Source National Center for Public Policy
Higher Education, Policy Alert, April 2004. Data
are estimates of pipeline progress rather than
actual cohort.
7How does Michigan stack up?
Source National Center for Public Policy
Higher Education, Policy Alert, April 2004. Data
are estimates of pipeline progress rather than
actual cohort.
8Only about half of African American and Latino
students graduate from high school in four years
On-time high school graduation, 2002
Source Manhattan Institute, Public High School
Graduation and College-Readiness Rates
19912002, February 2005, http//www.manhattan-ins
titute.org/html/ewp_08.htm.
9How does Michigan stack up?
On-time high school graduation, 2002
Source Manhattan Institute, Public High School
Graduation and College-Readiness Rates
19912002, February 2005, http//www.manhattan-ins
titute.org/html/ewp_08.htm.
10U.S. high school graduation rates have dropped
over past 20 years
Public high school graduation rates, 19812000
Source Mortenson, T., Chance for College by Age
19 by State in 2000, Postsecondary Education
Opportunity The Environmental Scanning Research
Letter of Opportunity for Postsecondary
Education, No. 123, The Mortenson Research Center
on Public Policy, September 2002.
11High school graduation rate United States
trails most countries
Source Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development, Education at a Glance 2004, 2004.
12Very few high school graduates are college ready
Source Manhattan Institute, Public High School
Graduation and College-Readiness Rates
19912002, February 2005, http//www.manhattan-ins
titute.org/html/ewp_08.htm.
13How does Michigan stack up?
Source Manhattan Institute, Public High School
Graduation and College-Readiness Rates
19912002, February 2005, http//www.manhattan-ins
titute.org/html/ewp_08.htm.
14College bound does not necessarily mean college
ready
Percentage of U.S. first-year students in
two-year and four-year institutions requiring
remediation
- Nearly three in 10 first-year students are placed
immediately into a remedial college course.
Source National Center for Education Statistics,
Remedial Education at Degree-Granting
Postsecondary Institutions in Fall 2000, 2003.
15Most U.S. college students who take remedial
courses fail to earn degrees
Percentage not earning degree by type of remedial
coursework
- Many college students who need remediation,
especially in reading and math, do not earn
either an associates or a bachelors degree.
Source National Center for Education Statistics,
The Condition of Education, 2004.
16College graduation rate U.S. lags behind most
developed countries
17American Diploma Project
- What does it take to be
- prepared for postsecondary
- education and work?
18The American Diploma Project
- Partners Education Trust, Thomas B. Fordham
Foundation, National Alliance of Business - 2 years of research on essential math English
skills - 2004 report Benchmarks to be successful in
college or work - Follow up reports Exit exams (2004), course
requirements (2004), poll (2005)
19Expectations are the same for both college
good jobs
- ADP found high degree of convergence
- The knowledge skills that high school graduates
will need in order to be successful in college
are the same as those they will need in order to
be successful in a job that - pays enough to support a family well above the
poverty level, - provides benefits,
- offers clear pathways for career advancement
through further education training.
20Even blue-collar jobs require high-level skills
- Requirements for tool and die makers
- Four or five years of apprenticeship and/or
postsecondary training - Algebra, geometry, trigonometry and statistics
- Requirements for sheet metal workers
- Four or five years of apprenticeship
- Algebra, geometry, trigonometry and technical
reading
Source American Diploma Project, 2002.
21ADP expectations ensure high school graduates are
prepared to succeed
- In English, the benchmarks cover
- Language
- Communication
- Writing
- Research
- Logic
- Informational text
- Media
- Literature
- In math, the benchmarks cover
- Number sense and numerical operations
- Algebra
- Geometry
- Data interpretations, statistics and probability
- Math reasoning skills
22Whether graduates are going to college or work,
they need the same skills
- CollegeAlgebra
- Required Skills
- Add, subtract, multiply, divide and simplify
rational expressions - Understand functional notation
- Solve systems of two linear equations in two
variables - Solve quadratic equations in one variable
- Graph a linear equation and quadratic function
- Determine the perimeter and the circumference of
geometric shapes - Represent geometric objects and figures
algebraically
- Machine Operator
- Eastman Chemical Company
- Required Skills
- Add, subtract, multiply, divide and simplify
rational expressions - Calculate and apply ratios, proportions and
percentages to solve problems - Recognize and solve problems using a linear
equation and one variable - Apply units correctly in expressions involving
measurements - Determine the perimeter and the circumference of
geometric shapes
23To be college and work ready, students need to
complete a rigorous sequence of courses
To cover the content in the ADP benchmarks, high
school graduates need
- In math
- Four courses
- Content equivalent to Algebra I and II, Geometry,
and a fourth course such as Statistics or
Precalculus
- In English
- Four courses
- Content equivalent to four years of grade-level
English or higher (i.e., honors or AP English)
24American Diploma Project
- What do we expect of our
- high school graduates?
- Standards
- Course-taking requirements
- Assessments
25State high school standards not always anchored
in real-world expectations
- In most states, standards reflect a consensus
among discipline-based experts about what would
be important for young people to learn not a
reflection of what would be essential to know to
succeed at the next level. - Few states postsecondary faculty and employers
have verified that state high school standards
reflect their expectations.
26Do state graduation requirements reflect
college- and work-ready content?
- To answer this question, Achieve
- Reviewed minimum high school course requirements
in all 50 states. - Compared each states requirements to what
students need to be successful in college and the
workplace.
2742 states require students to take certain
courses to graduate from high school
Source Achieve, Inc., The Expectations Gap A
50-State Review of High School Graduation
Requirements, 2004.
2820 states require Algebra I
Source Achieve, Inc., The Expectations Gap A
50-State Review of High School Graduation
Requirements, 2004.
2913 states require Geometry
Source Achieve, Inc., The Expectations Gap A
50-State Review of High School Graduation
Requirements, 2004.
30Only 4 states require Algebra II
Source Achieve, Inc., The Expectations Gap A
50-State Review of High School Graduation
Requirements, 2004.
31Michigans course requirements for graduation
- Apart from the requirement that high school
students in Michigan complete a course in
Government/Civics, all course requirements for
graduation are set by local school districts.
32Do assessments measure college-ready skills?
- Half the states require students to pass one or
more exams to earn a high school diploma. - What does it take to pass these tests?
33The tests Achieve analyzed
Source Achieve, Inc., Do Graduation Tests
Measure Up? A Closer Look at State High School
Exit Exams, 2004.
34Good news States are measuring algebra and
geometry
Source Achieve, Inc., Do Graduation Tests
Measure Up? A Closer Look at State High School
Exit Exams, 2004.
35Bad news States tend to measure lower-level
content
Source Achieve, Inc., Do Graduation Tests
Measure Up? A Closer Look at State High School
Exit Exams, 2004.
36Students can pass state math tests knowing
content typically taught in 7th and 8th grade
internationally
Grade when most international students cover
content required to pass state math tests
FL MD MA
NJ OH TX
Source Achieve, Inc., Do Graduation Tests
Measure Up? A Closer Look at State High School
Exit Exams, 2004.
37Reading tests downplay higher-level skills
Source Achieve, Inc., Do Graduation Tests
Measure Up? A Closer Look at State High School
Exit Exams, 2004.
38Students can pass state English tests with skills
ACT expects of 8th and 9th graders
ACT (11th/12th)
ACT PLAN (10th)
ACT EXPLORE (8th/9th)
FL
MD
MA
NJ
OH
TX
Source Achieve, Inc., Do Graduation Tests
Measure Up? A Closer Look at State High School
Exit Exams, 2004.
39American Diploma Project
- What do recent high school graduates tell us
about the expectations they faced?
40Most high school graduates were moderately
challenged
All high school graduates
College students
Students who did not go to college
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
41Graduates who faced high expectations in high
school twice as likely to feel prepared for future
Percentage saying they were extremely/very well
prepared
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
42Algebra II critical for college and work
High school graduates extremely or very well
prepared for expectations of college/work
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
43Writing critical for college and work
High school graduates extremely or very well
prepared for expectations of college/work
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
44Knowing what they know today, high school
graduates would have worked harder
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
45If high school had demanded more, graduates would
have worked harder
- Strongly feel I would have worked harder
- Wouldnt have worked harder
82
80
High school graduates who did not go to college
High school graduates who went to college
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
46Majority of graduates would have taken harder
courses
Knowing what you know today about the
expectations of college/work
Would have taken more challenging courses in at
least one area Math Science English
Would have taken more challenging courses in
Source Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public
Opinion Strategies, Rising to the Challenge Are
High School Graduates Prepared for College and
Work? prepared for Achieve, Inc., 2005.
47American Diploma Project
- What will it take to close the expectations gap?
48ADP Network 18 states committed to improving
student achievement
49Closing the expectations gap requires states to
take action
- Align high school standards and assessments with
the knowledge and skills required for success in
postsecondary education and work. - Administer a college- and work-ready assessment,
aligned to state standards, to high school
students so they get clear and timely information
and are able to address critical skill
deficiencies while still in high school. - Require all students to take a college- and
work-ready curriculum to earn a high school
diploma. - Hold high schools accountable for graduating
students who are college ready, and hold
postsecondary institutions accountable for their
success once enrolled.
50The Challenge for Michigan
512003 study of Michigan academic standards
- Achieve evaluated the states new K-8 content
expectations, comparing them to the best
standards from other states. - Our conclusions
- New standards a significant improvement over the
previous core curriculum standards in terms of
rigor, clarity, coherence - New standards among the strongest in the nation
52Next steps on standards
- Create new high school standards that
- Build off of K-8 standards
- Align with expectations of colleges and employers
- Clearly specify expectations for all four years
of high school
53Next steps on standards
- Postsecondary and business leaders should verify
that new high school standards are aligned with
skills for success in college and work. - If students meet these standards, will they be
ready for - Credit bearing, non-remedial college coursework?
- High trajectory jobs?
54High School Assessments
- How might Michigan develop a system of high
school assessments that is - Aligned to state standards that will allow
students to demonstrate that they are meeting
those standards? - AND
- Capable of revealing whether students are
prepared for college and work?
55Some states are using high school assessments for
postsecondary purposes
- California State University system augmented the
states high school test and now uses it for
placement purposes. - City University of New York uses scores on the
states Regents exam for admissions and placement
purposes. - Texas students who earn a certain score on the
state TAKS exam can be placed in college-level
courses. - Some states are considering incorporating the SAT
or ACT into their high school assessment systems.
56Graduation course requirements
- How Can Michigan
- Let all young people know which high school
courses will best equip them to succeed in
college, in the workplace, and in life? - Encourage more young people to take these
courses? - Make better use of high school graduation
requirements as a lever for change?
57How many students are taking a rigorous math
sequence?
The statistical estimating method is imprecise
above 95. Source CCSSO, State Indicators of
Science and Mathematics Education, 2003
58 Indianas Core 40 more challenging courses
yield results
40th in nation
10th in nation
59A strong high school curriculum improves college
completion and narrows gaps
13
30
Completing at least Algebra II plus other
courses. Source Adapted from Adelman, Clifford,
U.S. Department of Education, Answers in the
Toolbox, 1999.
60How do the default diplomas in these states
compare?
Math Require-ments American Diploma Project Arkansas Smart Core Indiana Core 40 Oklahoma College Prep Texas Recom-mended H.S. Program Michigan Scholars Program / Presidents Council
Required Years 4 4 3 3 3 4
Algebra I ? ? ? ? ? ?
Geometry ? ? ? ? ? ?
Algebra II ? ? ? ? ? ?
Beyond Alg. II ? ? ?
61The minimum math requirements for students who
opt out
Math Require-ments American Diploma Project Arkansas Common Core Indiana General Diploma Oklahoma Standard Diploma Texas Minimum H.S. Program
Required Years 4 4 2 3 3
Algebra I ? ? ? ? ?
Geometry ? ? ? ?
Algebra II ?
Beyond Alg. II ?
62What did IN do to increase the number of students
pursuing a college- work-ready curriculum?
- Involved postsecondary community in shaping Core
40 Course of Study to ensure it met their needs - Created special diploma designation for students
who took and passed the Core 40 - Attached postsecondary incentives
(scholarships/financial aid) - Built Core 40 into high school accountability
ratings - Made Core 40 the default for all students
63How Michigan might proceed on course requirements
- Survey districts to determine
- Current graduation requirements
- How many students currently complete a college-
and work-ready curriculum - Study how other states rolled out and phased in
new requirements - Start with recommended then shift to required
- Postsecondary and business offer incentives
- Collect course taking data from districts and
publicly report on progress - Consider default strategy with opt outprovision
64For more information, please visit Achieve, Inc.,
on the Web at http//www.achieve.org
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