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Credit Recovery. Howard Johnston, Ph. D. University of South Florida Tampa, Florida hojofl@gmail.com. Practical Leadership, LLC Improving the Schools of Today - Inventing the Schools of Tomorrow. What’s the Problem?. Every day in the US, 7000 kids drop out
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Credit Recovery Howard Johnston, Ph. D. University of South Florida Tampa, Florida hojofl@gmail.com Practical Leadership, LLC Improving the Schools of Today - Inventing the Schools of Tomorrow
What’s the Problem? • Every day in the US, 7000 kids drop out • 12 million will drop out in the next decade • Dropouts earn $19,540 a year; grads $27,380 • Net economic loss in US: $1.5 trillion • In PA, 80% graduate; range is 41% - 98% • African American grad rate is 57% in US • Hispanic grad rate is 58% in US • > 50% of inmates are dropouts
Why Are They Leaving School? • Absence of family support • Becoming a parent • Missing too many days of school • Failing too many courses • Uninteresting classes • Personal problems: mental illness, drugs, etc.
What to Look For If a sixth grader in a high poverty school… • attends school less than 80 percent of the time, • fails math or English, or • receives an unsatisfactory behavior grade in a core course, …there is a 75 percent chance he or she will drop out of high school. --Robert Balfanz, Johns Hopkins
Credit Recovery: a structured means for students to earn missed credit in order to graduate Fully online $ Face-to-face $$$$$
Does it Work? • Definitely Yes! • Definitely No! • Definitely Maybe! Lots of opinion and anecdotal evidence; little conclusive research or evaluation data
Questions and Issues • Little data on rigor or effectiveness of program. • Do students move at own pace, or slide out? • How long should a class take? • How are credits recorded? Is it fair? • Is there equal access – especially online? • Is it just about the money? (Online courses are much cheaper than hiring a teacher.)
Who Benefits Most? • Youth with adult responsibilities such as caring for family or paid employment • Youth involved with the criminal justice system • Older immigrant youth/English language learners • Youth with learning disabilities or emotional or behavioral issues (with support) • Youth aging out of the foster care system • Youth who move regularly from one school to another • Teen mothers
Less Successful Candidates • Students who are poorly motivated to earn a diploma • People with serious, untreated behavioral or mental health issues • People who lack enough self-discipline for self-paced learning (and do not have a supervisor, mentor, or coach available) • Seriously skill-deficient students
Features of Successful Programs • Required to offer CR courses by state or LEA • Well-publicized; well-regarded by public • Wide-spread availability across state or district • Stable finances – Start-up funds are crucial • Courses aligned with state standards & tests • Courses self-paced and competency-based • High quality instruction and accountability • Clear program completion expectations • Options for unsuccessful CR students
It’s the Attitude, Stupid! YOURS THEIRS Willingness to take responsibility for their situation Motivation to graduate Clear educational aspirations Respect for the process (Don’t game the system.) Acceptance of accountability Willing to ask for help • Respected by school staff • Endorsed by district • Promoted in the community • Not just about drop-out prevention; it’s preparation for work or post-sec ed • First class citizenship for participants • Policy environment doesn’t create snags
Key Decisions • Who is eligible? What criteria will we use? • Who will staff it? OR uses “accredited” people. • Locally produced or purchased from a vendor? • Do we have a “credit by proficiency” infrastructure in place? Can we build one? • How is it funded? Source of start-up money? • What will we offer? How often? How long? • Can we collaborate to save resources? • What happens to unsuccessful students?
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Practical Leadership Materials from this session are available at: http://ronwilliamson.com/Practical_Leadership.html