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The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation – An Overview of What We Know Now in Washington State. May 11, 2006. THE PROBLEM. Only 32% of American high school students will graduate with skills they need to succeed in college or work.
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The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation – An Overview of What We Know Now in Washington State May 11, 2006
THE PROBLEM Only 32% of American high school students will graduate with skills they need to succeed in college or work. • Only 1/4th of high school graduates are prepared for college-level classes in English, math, reading and science (ACT) • Only ½ half the graduates are prepared for college-level reading and 40 percent for math.
OUR GOAL All Students College Ready: Improve graduation and college readiness, especially for low income and minority students • Short-term outcome indicators: • Climate-3 R’s • Attendance • Progression rates • Achievement gains
GRANTS OVERVIEW • Over $1 Billion in Education to date • Major investments in Chicago, New York City, California, Ohio, Texas, and Washington state • 1,700 new and re-designed schools in more than 40 states • Networks: e.g. New Schools Venture Fund, New Visions, KnowledgeWorks, NCLR, Early College High Schools, others • Gates Millennium Scholarships
3 LEVEL FOUNDATION STRATEGY • States • College ready policies • Support capacity Public will & improved public policy, 80% College Ready Graduation Rate • Districts • Alignment and options • Effective services Improvement momentum Knowledge, evidence & tools • Schools • New school networks • Improvement models
STRUCTURE AND INSTRUCTION Powerful Teaching and Learning Rigor • Conceptual Understanding • Problem Solving or Reasoning • Effective Communication Relevance • Real-world Connections • Student Involvement in Crafting Assignments Effective Schools • Common Focus • High Expectations • Personalization • Respect and Responsibility • Time to Collaborate • Performance Based • Technology as a Tool
WEB SOURCES OF REPORTS www.norc.org/gatesscholars www.gatesfoundation.org/Education/ResearchAndEvaluation/ http://www.waedfoundation.org/
EVALUATION • Launched in Spring 2001 • AIR and SRI • Mandate: “Tell the story” • Three interlocking studies: • Implementation • Student outcomes • System outcomes
WASHINGTON STATE ACHIEVERS (WSA) Middle School Early College Awareness High School Improvement Prepares All Students for College College Access & Scholarships All Students College Ready 35+ Middle Schools 16 High Schools + Mentoring 500 Scholarship per year + Summer bridge + College mentor
SUPPORT PROGRAMS FOR ACHIEVERS CANDIDATES AND SCHOLARS • College Awareness Curriculum • Achievers College Experience (ACE) • Higher Education Readiness Opportunity (HERO) • Community College Retention Activities • College-Readiness Campaign • Achievers Scholars Alumni Association • Additional Partnerships: WA State Legislation, HEC Board, GEAR-UP and UW Summer Honors Academy
IMPROVING WASL READING SCORES: 16 ACHIEVERS HIGH SCHOOLS 12.6% 16.8%
IMPROVING WASL MATH Scores: 16 ACHIEVERS HIGH SCHOOLS 12.4% 14.0%
HIGH SCHOOL COLLEGE PREPARATION AND ATTENDANCE OUTCOMES FOR STUDENTS IN WSA AND NON-WSA SCHOOLS: 2000-2004 • Initial difference between WSA and Non-WSA schools in 2000 • Rates at achiever schools increasing • Rates at non-achiever schools stagnant or decreasing
KEY FINDING: IMPROVED COLLEGE ENROLLMENT: ACHIEVERS HIGH SCHOOLS AND SCHOLARS
PROGRESSTO DATE: • Increases in percentage of students passing WASL math and reading exams; • Increase in number of students graduating with course requirements for admission to Washington four year colleges; • Increases in number of students taking the SAT/ACT • Increases in students enrolling in four year colleges
2006 WASHINGTON INTEGRATED WORKPLAN • Advance the state’s college/work-ready practices and policies • Support district and school improvement focused on the college-and work-ready agenda • Expand the Transition Math Project (TMP) • Utilize research, communications and community outreach efforts • Strengthen the state’s support system for low-performing schools and districts • Support OSPI’s district and high school improvement model • Build capacity in Educational Service Districts • Strengthen alternative high school models • Inform the school finance conversation • Help inform Washington Learns • Look for additional advocates on school finance issues