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HIGH SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT IN AMERICA: What Do We Know? Iowa High School Summit The Education Trust December, 2004.

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Presentation on theme: "HIGH SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT IN AMERICA: What Do We Know? Iowa High School Summit The Education Trust December, 2004."— Presentation transcript:

1 HIGH SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT IN AMERICA: What Do We Know? Iowa High School Summit The Education Trust December, 2004

2 What Do We Know About Student Achievement?

3 12th Grade Achievement In Math and Science is Up Somewhat

4 High School Achievement: Math and Science: NAEP Long-Term Trends Source: NAEP 1999 Trends in Academic Progress.

5 In Reading, 12th Grade Achievement is Headed Downward

6 HIGH SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT: READING AND WRITING NAEP Long-Term Trends

7 What about different groups of students?

8 Gaps Narrow 1970-88 NAEP Reading 17 Year-Olds Source: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. NAEP 1999 Trends in Academic Progress (p. 107) Washington, DC: US Department of Education, August 2000

9 Gaps Narrow 1973-86 NAEP Math Scores, 13 Year-Olds Source: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. NAEP 1999 Trends in Academic Progress (p. 108) Washington, DC: US Department of Education, August 2000

10 Between 1988-90, that progress came to a halt…and gaps began to widen once again.

11 Gaps Narrow Then Mostly Widen Reading, 17 Year-Olds NAEP Long-Term Trends Source: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. NAEP 1999 Trends in Academic Progress (p. 107) Washington, DC: US Department of Education, August 2000 21 31

12 Source: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. NAEP 1999 Trends in Academic Progress (p. 108) Washington, DC: US Department of Education, August 2000 Gaps Narrow, Then Hold Steady or Widen: Math, 17 Year-Olds NAEP Long-Term Trends 20 32

13 How much learning takes place at each level?

14 Students Make More Growth Grade 5 to 8 than Grade 9 to 12

15 Academic Growth Grades 5-8, 9-12

16 Value Added in High School Declined During the Nineties

17 Value Added Declining in High School Math... Age 13-17 Growth Source: NAEP 1999 Trends in Academic Progress

18 …Still Age 13-17 Growth Source: Main NAEP 1996, 2000

19 Reading: Students Entering Better Prepared, But Leaving Worse Source: NAEP 1996 Trends in Academic Progress

20 Hormones?

21 Students in Other Countries Gain far More in Middle and High School

22 TIMSS

23 Source: NCES 1999-081R, Highlights From TIMSS

24

25 PISA

26 US 15 Year-Olds Rank Near Middle Of The Pack Among 32 Participating Countries

27 One measure on which we rank high? Inequality!

28 Source: OECD, Knowledge and Skills for Life: First Results From PISA 2000, 2001. *Of 27 OECD countries Performance Of U.S. 15 Year-Olds Highly Variable

29 These gaps evident when children arrive at school.

30 By Race, Ethnicity NAEP 4th Grade Reading 2003 Source: USDOE, NCES, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

31 But they grow wider the longer students remain in school. By end of high school?

32 African American and Latino 17 Year Olds Do Math at Same Levels As White 13 Year Olds Source: NAEP 1999 Long Term Trends Summary Tables (online)

33 African American and Latino 17 Year Olds Read at Same Levels as White 13 Year Olds Source: Source: NAEP 1999 Long Term Trends Summary Tables (online)

34 And these are the students who remain in school.

35 Students Graduate From High School At Different Rates, 2001 Source: Jay P. Greene and Greg Forster, “Public High School Graduation and College Readiness Rates in the United States,” Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, September 2003.

36 Iowa?

37 IA By Race, Ethnicity NAEP 4th Grade Reading 2003 Source: USDOE, NCES, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

38 IA By Race, Ethnicity NAEP 8th Grade Math 2003 Source: USDOE, NCES, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

39 White 8 th Graders: NAEP Math

40 Latino 8 th Graders: NAEP Math

41 Black 8th Graders? NAEP MATH

42 Low Income 8th Graders? NAEP MATH

43 Latinos: 8 th Grade Reading

44 African Americans: 8 th Grade Reading

45 High School and Beyond?

46 Upper Level Course Taking: IA vs. Top States IATOP States 8 th Graders Taking Algebra n/a35% 9-12 th Graders Taking at Least One Upper Level Math Course 50%59% 9-12 th Graders Taking at Least One Upper Level Science Course 39%41%

47 Iowa ACT Score Trend

48 Iowa ACT Takers Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks, 2004

49 Percent of Iowa Students Taking ACT, 2004

50 IOWA Promoting Power: 9 th Graders Who Graduate with a Diploma 4 Years Later

51 Inevitable?

52 What Most Educators Say: They’re poor; Their parents don’t care; They come to schools without breakfast; Not enough books Not enough parents...

53 Hambrick Middle School, Aldine, TX 94% African American and Latino (state = 56%) 85% low-income (state = 50%) Has performed in the top fifth of all Texas middle schools in both reading and math in both 7 th and 8 th grades over a 3-year period.

54 Prince Edward County High, Farmville VA Sources: Virginia Department of Education Web site, http://www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/Assessment/2002SOLpassrates.html.http://www.pen.k12.va.us/VDOE/Assessment/2002SOLpassrates.html (715 students – 55% African American and Latino)

55 Norview High School Norfolk, VA 67% African American 28% White 2% Latino 45% Low-Income Outperformed the state and district in math and reading in 2003

56 High Achievement at Norview High School Math, 2003 Source: The Department of Education, http://www.schoolresults.org/

57 High Achievement at Norview Source: The Department of Education, http://www.schoolresults.org/

58 MA: Passing HS Competency Exam Source: Massachusetts Department of Education Web site.

59 MA: Narrowing the High School Competency Gap Source: Massachusetts Department of Education Web site.

60 MA: Narrowing the High School Competency Gap Source: Massachusetts Department of Education Web site.

61 MA: Narrowing the High School Competency Gap Source: Massachusetts Department of Education Web site.

62 SO, WHAT CAN WE DO? Five questions to help frame improvement efforts.

63 #1. Can we agree on a single, overarching goal for high school that will give clearer purpose, focus to our reform efforts?

64 KIDS AND PARENTS ARE CLEAR: THEIR GOAL IS COLLEGE Source: U.S. DOE, NCES, Getting Ready to Pay for College: What Students and Their Parents Know About the Cost of College Tuition and What They Are Doing to Find Out, September 2003.

65 Indeed, Most High School Grads Do Go On To Postsecondary Within 2 Years Source: NELS: 88, Second (1992) and Third (1994) Follow up; in, USDOE, NCES, “Access to Postsecondary Education for the 1992 High School Graduates”, 1998, Table 2.

66 Source: US bureau of Labor Statistics and Bureau of the Census, Current Population Survey, March 2002 That’s Good, Because Education Pays: Annual Earnings of 25-34 yr-olds by Attainment, 2001

67 But Many of Those College Freshmen Not Prepared…and Do Not Return for Sophomore Year Source: Tom Mortensen, Postsecondary Opportunity, No. 89, November 1999

68 Why? At Least In Part Because Their Teachers Had Other Ideas About Their Plans

69 To break through these old attitudes, cannot equivocate. ALL students must graduate from high school ready for postsecondary education.

70 #2. It is increasingly clear that student success--in college, on assessments, and in gaining access to decent jobs-- depends on completing a rigorous, college prep-level curriculum.

71 Transcript Study: single biggest predictor of college success is QUALITY AND INTENSITY OF HIGH SCHOOL CURRICULUM Cliff Adelman, Answers in the Tool Box, U.S. Department of Education.

72 But college prep curriculum has benefits far beyond college.

73 Students of all sorts will learn more...

74 Source: USDOE, NCES, Vocational Education in the United States: Toward the Year 2000, in Issue Brief: Students Who Prepare for College and Vocation *Grade 8-grade 12 test score gains based on 8th grade achievement. Low Quartile Students Gain More From College Prep Courses*

75 MATH ACHIEVEMENT LEVELS BY GRADE 8 PERFORMANCE Source: Maureen Hallinan, “Ability Grouping and Student Learning,” May, 2002

76 Iowa Students: Course-Taking and ACT Performance, Math 2004

77 Iowa Students: Course-Taking and ACT Performance, Science 2004

78 They will also fail less often...

79 Challenging Curriculum Results in Lower Failure Rates, Even for Lowest Achievers Source: SREB, “Middle Grades to High School: Mending a Weak Link”. Unpublished Draft, 2002. Ninth-grade English performance, by high/low level course, and eighth-grade reading achievement quartiles

80 And they’ll be better prepared for the workplace.

81 Requirements for Tool and Die Makers Four or five years of apprenticeship and/or postsecondary training; Algebra, geometry, trigonometry and statistics; Average earnings: $40,000 per year.

82 Requirements for Sheet Metal Workers Four or five years of apprenticeship; Algebra, geometry, trigonometry and technical reading;

83 Time for a Default Curriculum? Texas Indiana

84 #3. Shouldn’t we stop leaving teachers on their own to decide what and how to teach in “college prep” courses?

85 Students can do no better than the assignments they are given...

86 Grade 10 Writing Assignment A frequent theme in literature is the conflict between the individual and society. From literature you have read, select a character who struggled with society. In a well-developed essay, identify the character and explain why this character’s conflict with society is important.

87 Grade 10 Writing Assignment Write a composition of at least 4 paragraphs on Martin Luther King’s most important contribution to this society. Illustrate your work with a neat cover page. Neatness counts.

88 High Performing Schools and Districts Have clear and specific goals for what students should learn in every grade, including the order in which they should learn it; Provide teachers with common curriculum, assignments; Assess students every 4-8 weeks to measure progress; ACT immediately on the results of those assessments.

89 #4. How can we provide extra instruction for students who arrive behind?

90 When Kids Are Behind, Schools Must Provide More Instruction and Support: Kentucky provides extra time for struggling students in high-poverty schools Maryland offers extra dollars for 7th and 8th graders who need more support Massachusetts and Ohio provide extra tutoring, instruction for students not perform

91 Most of us think of semester- or year-long increments to teach kids what they need to learn, but...

92 The Full Year Calendar

93 Less Summer Vacation

94 Less Weekends, Holidays, & Summer Vacation

95 Less Professional Development Days & Early Dismissal/Parent Conferences

96 Less Class Picnic, Class Trip, Thanksgiving Feast, Christmas, Kwanzaa, Hannukkah, Awards, Assembles, & Concerts

97 Less State and District Testing

98 Bottom Line: Roughly 13-15 Eight-Hour Days Per Subject Per Year

99 #5. How Can We Organize Schools in Pursuit of Different Outcomes

100 It’s easy to fall into a pattern of blaming poor results on problems “beyond our control.” For example, high 9 th grade failure rates generally blamed on poor preparation, difficult transitions. But…

101 One Colorado High School: Student/Teacher Ratio by Grade Grade9th10th11th12th Average number of students per teacher 30.316.711.612.1 Source: Jovenes Unidos & Padres Unidos; March, 2004.

102 Same Colorado High School: Counselor Deployment by Grade Grade9th10th11th12th Number of Counselors 1111 Number of Students 572366309213 Source: Jovenes Unidos and Padres Unidos; March, 2004

103 Likewise, large achievement gaps at exit…typically blamed on large achievement gaps at entry. But…

104 Poor kids and kids of color get less than their fair share of experienced and well educated teachers.

105 Classes in High Poverty High Schools More Often Taught by Misassigned* Teachers *Teachers who lack a major or minor in the field Source: National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future, What Matters Most: Teaching for America’s Future (p.16) 1996.

106 Math and Science Classes of Mostly Minority Students Are More Often Taught by Misassigned Teachers Source: Jeannie Oakes. Multiplying Inequalities: The Effects of Race, Social Class, and Tracking on Opportunities to Learn Mathematics and Science (Rand: 1990)

107 Poor and Minority Students Get More Inexperienced* Teachers *Teachers with 3 or fewer years of experience. “High” and “low” refer to top and bottom quartiles. Source: National Center for Education Statistics, “Monitoring Quality: An Indicators Report,” December 2000.

108 Even Within Schools, Often Big Differences

109 In other words, the choices we make either exacerbate—or ameliorate—achievement gaps.

110 The Education Trust Download this Presentation At www.edtrust.org Washington, DC: 202-293-1217 Oakland, CA: 510-465-6444


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