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Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

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Page 1: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation RequirementsOpening PlenaryMatt GandalJune 17, 2010

Page 2: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

The ADP Network Today

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Page 3: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

The Expectations Gap

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In many states, students can earn a high school diploma without the skills necessary for success in

college and careers.

What students are typically expected to

know at the end of high school, as defined by

state standards, required curriculum and assessments

The knowledge and skills demanded by

postsecondary and employers for successful

first-year students and new employees.

RESULT

Page 4: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

The College- and Career-Ready Agenda

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Page 5: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

A HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA IS NOLONGER ENOUGH FOR SUCCESSThe changing economy is accelerating theexpectations gap, as careers increasingly requiresome education/training beyond high school,and more developed knowledge and skills.

Page 6: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

6Source: Carnevale, Anthony P. and Donna M. Desrochers, Standards for What? The Economic Roots of K–16 Reform, Educational Testing Service, 2003.

Jobs in Today’s Workforce Require More Education & Training

Page 7: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

7Source: The Future of Middle-Skill Jobs” by Harry J. Holzer and Robert I. Lerman, Brookings Institution, February 2009.

The Rise of the Middle-Skill Jobs

High-skill jobs

Occupations in the professional/ technical and managerial categories.

Often require four-year degrees and above

Middle-skill jobs

Occupations that include clerical, sales, construction, installation/repair, production, and transportation/material moving.

Low-skill jobs

Occupations in the service and agricultural categories.

Often require some education and training beyond high school (but typically less than a bachelor’s degree), including associate’s degrees, vocational certificates, significant on-the-job training.

Page 8: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

8Source: The Future of Middle-Skill Jobs” by Harry J. Holzer and Robert I. Lerman, Brookings Institution, February 2009.

Employment Shares by Occupational Skill Level

Page 9: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

FAR TOO MANY STUDENTS DROP OUT OR GRADUATE FROM HIGH SCHOOL UNPREPARED FOR REAL WORLD CHALLENGES

Page 10: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

The vast majority of students intend to go on to college and do not expect to drop out of high school:

93 percent of middle school students report there is “no chance” they will drop out in high school

94 percent of high school students say that they are planning to continue their education after high school either at a two- or four-year institution.

95 percent of teenagers report that graduating from high school is “critical to their future success.”

The last thing our education system should do is let students down and prevent them from reaching their goals.

Students Overwhelmingly Want to Succeed and Attend College

10Source: Middle Schools Poll, Prepared for the National Association of Secondary School Principals and Phi Delta Kappa, 2007; Civic Enterprises, The Silent Epidemic: Perspectives of High School Dropouts, 2006; Boys & Girls Clubs of America/Taco Bell Foundation for Teens, Teen Graduation Crisis Survey, 2009.

Page 11: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

Of Every 100 9th Graders…

11Source: NCHEMS Information Center for Higher Education Policymaking and Analysis. Student Pipeline - Transition andCompletion Rates from 9th Grade to College. www.higheredinfo.org/dbrowser/index.php?submeasure=119&year=2006&level=nation&mode=data&state=0

Page 12: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

Freshmen at Two-Year Colleges are More Likely to Require Remediation

12Source: National Center for Education Statistics, Remedial Education at Degree-Granting Postsecondary Institutions in Fall 2000, 2003.

Page 13: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

Most U.S. College Students Who Take Remedial Courses Fail to Earn Degrees

13Source: National Center for Education Statistics, The Condition of Education, 2004: % of 1992 12th graders who entered postsecondary education.

Percentage earning degree by type of remedial coursework

Page 14: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

The Majority of Graduates Would Have Taken Harder Courses, Particularly in Mathematics

14Source: Peter D. Hart Research Associates/Public Opinion Strategies. (2005) Rising to the Challenge: Are High School Graduates Prepared for College and Work? Washington, DC: Achieve.

Would have taken more challenging courses in at least one area

Math

Science

English

Knowing what you know today about the expectations of college/work …

Page 15: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

THE SOLUTION: STATE-LED EFFORTS TO CLOSE THE EXPECTATIONS GAP All students deserve a world-class education that prepares them for college, careers and life.

Page 16: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

16Source: Horn, L. and A.M. Nuñez (2000). Mapping the Road to College: First-generation Students' Math Track, Planning Strategies, and Context of Support. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education. http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2001/2001153.pdf; Adelman, C. (2006). The Toolbox Revisited: Paths to Degree Completion from High School through College. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education.

The Importance of Rigorous Course-Taking in Closing Gaps

Students who take challenging courses & meet high standards are much more likely to enter college ready to succeed.

87% of first-generation college-going students – who took a highly rigorous course of study in high school – persisted in college or earned a degree after 18 months.

Only 55% of first-generation students who took just a general curriculum persisted that long

High school students who take advanced math double their chances of earning a postsecondary degree:

59% of low-income students who took advanced math in high school earned a bachelor’s degree.

36% of low-income students who did not complete the rigorous high school course of study earned a bachelor’s degree.

Page 17: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

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As of 2004, only two states – Arkansas and Texas – had set their graduation requirements at the college- and career-ready level.

Today, 21 states and the District of Columbia have raised their requirements to include (at a minimum):

Four years of grade-level English,

3-4 years of mathematics (including Algebra II or its equivalent),

At least three years of science (including a lab experience*),

At least three years of social science/economics, and

A range of elective options (such as career and technical education pathways and fine arts).

Source: Achieve Survey/Research, 2010

State-Led Efforts: College- and Career-Ready Graduation Requirements

Page 18: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

STATES WITH COLLEGE- AND CAREER-READY GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS, BY FIRST IMPACTED GRADUATING CLASS

2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

Texas Arkansas Delaware Georgia Alabama Ohio Florida

Oklahoma District of Columbia Kentucky Arizona Minnesota

New York Indiana Mississippi New Mexico Nebraska

South Dakota Michigan North

Carolina

Tennessee

Washington

First Cohort of Students To Graduate under the New Requirements

Page 19: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

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Changing Environment

Dwindling State Resources

2010 Elections will bring changes in leadership in many states

Race to the Top offers potential new resources & air cover to pursue these policies

Common Core Standards and Assessments will shape this work in many states

Page 20: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

A DISCUSSION OF PROGRESS AND CHALLENGES

Page 21: Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements Opening Plenary Matt Gandal June 17, 2010

Supporting College- & Career Ready Graduation Requirements