Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Leadership Atlanta December 2, 2010 1Examine the Data for Education in Georgia 2Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates 3Strengthening the Birth to Work.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Leadership Atlanta December 2, 2010 1Examine the Data for Education in Georgia 2Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates 3Strengthening the Birth to Work."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Leadership Atlanta December 2, 2010 1Examine the Data for Education in Georgia 2Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates 3Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline 4What Can We Do?

3 Examine the Data for Education in Georgia

4 Academic Achievement Milestones School Readiness Literacy by 3 rd Grade Numeracy by 8 th Grade High School Graduation Workforce and/or College Ready

5 Percent of Children Age 3-5 Enrolled in Early Education, 2008 Source: The Annie E. Casey Foundation, KIDS COUNT Data Center. Georgia 63% United States 61%

6 NAEP 2009 4 th Grade Reading At or Above Basic Source: National Center for Education Statistics Georgia 63% United States 65%

7 NAEP 2009 8 th Grade Math At or Above Basic Source: National Center for Education Statistics United States 71% Georgia 67%

8 SAT 2009 Scores – All States Source: College Board, 2009 College-Bound Seniors, State and National Reports. United States 1509 Georgia 1460

9 SAT 2009 Scores – States with Participation Rate At or Above 25% Source: College Board, 2009 College-Bound Seniors, State and National Reports. United States 1509 Georgia 1460

10 SAT 2009 Scores – States with Participation Rate At or Above 60% Source: College Board, 2009 College-Bound Seniors, State and National Reports. United States 1509 Georgia 1460

11 Source: NCES (2010). Public School Graduates and Dropouts: School Year 2007-08. United States 74.9% Georgia 65.4% High School Graduation Rates: State-by-State Rankings

12 Georgia High School Graduation Rates Source: The Governor’s Office of Student Achievement, State Report Cards. Year High School Graduation Rate Number of High School Non-Grads 200772%28,883 200875%27,248 200979%23,567 201081%21,803 Total101,501

13 Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates

14 Education Pays Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Earnings & unemployment for full-time workers age 25 & older, not seasonally adjusted. Data given are 1 st quarter 2010 averages. EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT & EMPLOYMENT Unemployment RateApril 2010 Median Wkly Earnings (& approx. annual) 15% 10%5%0%02006001000 4.4 Bachelor’s Degree & Higher $1,140 ($59,280) 8.1 Some college/ Associate Degree $738 ($38,376) 10.5 HS Graduates, No College $624 ($32,448) 14.5 Less than a High School Diploma $448 ($23,296)

15 Unemployment Rates by Education Level Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, February 2010.

16 Unemployment Rates by County, Feb. 2010 Source: Georgia Department of Labor

17 State Service Delivery Regions

18 Economic Impact of High School Non-Completion How much could YOUR region benefit from this additional income currently being foregone? Source: Isley, P. & Hill, J. “Updated Economic Impact of High School Non-Completion in Georgia: 2005 Estimate,” Georgia Southern University. April 2007. *According to GSU study, totals may not add due to rounding. Region 1$2.2 billion Region 2$1.2 billion Region 3$4.2 billion Region 4$1.1 billion Region 5$1.1 billion Region 6$1.0 billion Region 7$1.1 billion Region 8$0.9 billion Region 9$0.9 billion Region 10$2.0 billion Region 11$1.0 billion Region 12$1.1 billion TOTAL$18 billion*

19 Compounded Impacts of High School Non-Completion Source: Levin, H., et al., (2007). The Costs and Benefits of an Excellent Education for All of America’s Children. INDIVIDUALSTHE COMMUNITY Lower Lifetime Earnings Reduced buying power & tax revenues; less economic growth Decreased health status; Higher mortality rates; More criminal activity Higher health care & criminal justice costs Higher teen pregnancy rates; Single motherhood Higher public services costs Less voting; Less volunteering Low rate of community involvement

20 Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline

21 KEY ISSUE #1 Early Life Experiences KEY ISSUE #2 Academic Achievement K-12 KEY ISSUE #3 Transitions to Work or College

22 Family Income Affects School Readiness Source: National Center for Education Statistics. (2004). Early Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 1998-99. Achievement Gap as Children Enter Kindergarten

23 Disparities in Early Vocabulary Growth Source: Hart, B. and Risley, T. R. (2003). “The Early Catastrophe: The 30 Million Word Gap by Age 3.” Professional Families 1,116 words Working Class Families 749 words Welfare Families 525 words

24 Economic Benefits of Early Education: Perry Preschool Study Source: Schweinhart, L.J., et al. (2005). Lifetime effects: The High/Scope Perry Preschool study through age 40.

25 Economic Benefits of Early Education: Perry Preschool Study Source: Schweinhart, L.J., et al. (2005). Lifetime effects: The High/Scope Perry Preschool study through age 40.

26 Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline KEY ISSUE #2 Academic Achievement K-12

27 6 th Grade Outcomes Can Predict Failure to Graduate High School Source: Balfanz, R. (2007). Preventing Student Disengagement and Keeping Students on the Graduation Path in Urban Middle-Grades Schools: Early Identification and Effective Intervetions. Flag in Sixth Grade Percent with this flag who… Attended ≤ 80% Failed Math Course Failed English Course Suspended Out of School Un- satisfactory Behavior Graduated on time 13 121624 Did not graduate 8381828071

28 Cost of Student Retention in Georgia (2009) 61,642X$8,909= More than $549 million Georgia students retained in 2009 Average annual cost of education per student Total cost of student retention in 2009 for Georgia Source: Georgia Department of Education; Partnership Calculation Example for Fulton County School System: 2,824X$9,594=$27,093,456

29 Essential Building Blocks of High Performing States Higher Standards Rigorous Curriculum Clear Accountability System Statewide Student Information System Leadership Training

30 3 rd Grade Reading Achievement in Georgia: Closing the Gaps Source: Georgia Department of Education. % of Students Meeting or Exceeding Standards

31 8 th Grade Math Achievement in Georgia: Closing the Gaps Source: Georgia Department of Education. % of Students Meeting or Exceeding Standards

32 High School Graduation Rates in Georgia: Closing the Gaps Source: Georgia Department of Education.

33 Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline KEY ISSUE #3 Transitions to Work or College

34 Source: U.S. Department of Labor. Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2009. The Demands of America’s New Economy The number of jobs for workers with a bachelor’s degree or higher will increase from 38 million in 2006 to 43 million by 2016 – a growth rate of nearly 15 percent. 12 of the 20 fastest growing occupations require an associate degree or higher.

35 Are They College Ready? Source: Nat’l Center for Education Statistics. “The Condition of Education: Student Effort & Educational Progress.” 2004 Educational Attainment of Remedial Coursetakers

36 Source: College Board, “The 6 th Annual A.P. Report to the Nation: Georgia Supplement,” 2010. Participation & Performance in AP Courses

37 What Can We Do?

38 Look at the Data for your Community KIDS COUNT Data Georgia Family Connection Partnership www.gafcp.org School and System Comparisons Georgia School Council Institute www.georgiaeducation.org

39 2009 CRCT Comparisons: 3 rd Grade Reading Dunwoody Springs Charter School Source: Georgia School Council Institute

40 2009 CRCT Comparisons: 8 th Grade Math Sandy Springs Middle School Source: Georgia School Council Institute

41 2009 SAT Comparisons: Average Total Score Riverwood High School Source: Georgia School Council Institute

42 Improving the Pipeline: Low Birth Weight in 2008 GOAL: Reduce the number of low birth weight babies by 10 percent in Fulton County. Fulton CountyGeorgia Total # of births 13,712146,464 # of low weight births 1,51014,014 low birth weight rate 11.0%9.6% RESULT: 151 healthier babies! Source: Georgia Department of Community Health 1,359 9.9%

43 Improving the Pipeline: High School Graduation in 2010 GOAL: Improve the number of graduates by 10 percent in Fulton County. Fulton CountyGeorgia Total # of Graduates 5,42591,561 Graduation Rate 85.3%80.8% RESULT: 543 more high school graduates! Source: Georgia Department of Education 5,968 93.8%

44 Aligning Educational Strategies Aligned Acts of Improvement Random Acts of Improvement GOALS

45 Insulating the Birth to Work Pipeline LEARNING & SOCIAL SUPPORTS Childcare Providers Afterschool Programs Academic Supports Job Training Civic Opportunities EarlyChildhood K – 12 System PostSecondary Work &Career ESSENTIAL COMMUNITY SERVICES Transportation Health Housing Financial Source: The Forum for Youth Investment

46 The Georgia Partnership is grateful to Georgia Natural Gas for its funding support. Visit our website at www.gpee.org.


Download ppt "Leadership Atlanta December 2, 2010 1Examine the Data for Education in Georgia 2Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates 3Strengthening the Birth to Work."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google