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The Case for College Readiness. Kent Pekel Executive Director College Readiness Consortium . Three Critical Questions:. Why should college readiness be the goal for all students? What is college readiness? What can we do to get all kids college ready? . FDIJGATJQN. FDIJGATJQN.
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The Case for College Readiness Kent Pekel Executive Director College Readiness Consortium
Three Critical Questions: • Why should college readiness be the goal for all students? • What is college readiness? • What can we do to get all kids college ready?
When I say the word readinessit includes: • Academic Readiness • Admissions Readiness • Career Readiness • Financial Readiness • Personal and Social Readiness
W.B. Pillsbury, Scientific Monthly, 1921 “We can picture the educational system as having a very important function as a selecting agency, a means of selecting the men of best intelligence from the deficient and mediocre. All are poured into the system at the bottom; the incapable are soon rejected or drop out after repeating various grades and pass into the ranks of unskilled labor….The more intelligent who are to be clerical workers pass into the high school; the most intelligent enter the universities whence they are selected for the professions.” Source: W.B. Pillsbury. Selection—An unnoticed function of education. Scientific Monthly, 12, January 1921, p. 71
For a long time, that system worked: Source: Claudia Goldin, “The Human Capital Century: Has U.S. leadership come to an end?”, Education Next, Winter, 2003 (vol. 3, no. 1).
The 20th Century Education Race:High School Completion Rates % 1 13 1 27 Approximated by % of persons with high schooldiploma in age groups 55-64, 45-55, 45-44 and 25-34 years Source: Prof. Andreas Schleicher, OECD Directorate for Education
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Cost per student Graduate supply Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) United States Cost per student Finland Graduate supply Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Australia Finland United Kingdom Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) Tertiary-type A graduation rate
The 21st Century Education Race: CollegeCompletion Rates Expenditure per student at tertiary level (USD) United States Australia Finland Tertiary-type A graduation rate
So why does it matter if our education system isn’t as good as Finland’s?
Projected GDP growth if U.S. high school students catch up to Finland’s $103 trillion Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, “The High Cost of Low Educational Performance: The Long-Run Economic Impact of Improving PISA Outcomes,” OECD 2010
Why readiness matters to individuals: Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Population Survey
Why readiness matters to families: Source: Ron Haskins, “Education and Economic Mobility” in Getting Ahead or Losing Ground: Economic Mobility in America, edited by Julia Isaacs, Isabel Sawhill, and Ron Haskins (Washington, D.C.: Brookings-Pew Economic Mobility Project, 2008), p. 91-104
But what about jobs that don’t require a postsecondary degree?
Ongoing Research from ACT: “…the majority of the fastest-growing jobs that require a high school diploma, pay a salary above the poverty line for a family of four, and provide opportunities for career advancement require knowledge and skills comparable to those expected of the first year college student.” Source: ACT, Inc. How Much Growth toward College Readiness Is Reasonable to Expect in High School?, 2009
So what does Minnesota’s future look like in this changing world?
Educational Attainment in Minnesota Today Levels of Education for MN Residents Ages 25-64 Source: U.S. Census, 2000
Education and Jobs in Minnesota:2008 vs. 2018 Source: Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, Help Wanted: Projections of Jobs and Education Requirements Through 2018, June 2010
Minnesota Grows Older Source: U.S. Census Counts and State Demographer Projection
Minnesota Grows More Diverse Source: Minnesota State Demographic Center
College Readiness in MN Today: % Meeting ACT Benchmarks Source: ACT, Minnesota: The Condition of College and Career Readiness Class of 2010
% Meeting Readiness BenchmarkIn Math Source: ACT, Minnesota: The Condition of College and Career Readiness Class of 2010
% Meeting Readiness BenchmarkIn English Source: ACT, Minnesota: The Condition of College and Career Readiness Class of 2010
% Meeting Readiness BenchmarkIn Social Science Source: ACT, Minnesota: The Condition of College and Career Readiness Class of 2010
% Meeting Readiness BenchmarkIn Biology Source: ACT, Minnesota: The Condition of College and Career Readiness Class of 2010
Three Critical Questions: • Why should college readiness be the goal for all students? • What is college readiness? • What can we do to get all kids college ready?
Components of College Readiness • Academic Readiness • Admissions Readiness • Career Readiness • Financial Readiness • Personal and Social Readiness
Components of College Readiness • Academic Readiness • Admissions Readiness • Career Readiness • Financial Readiness • Personal and Social Readiness
Jenn (college student): “I had a chemistry class my first quarter here…and I was in that class with a lot of people who knew the material. They were like, ‘Wow! This was easy. Why don’t you know this?” And I felt like I was dumb. And I knew I wasn’t. I worked so hard for a C in college when in high school I was in AP Chemistry and I got straight A’s…So it’s like I’m trying to catch up and it’s hard. I wish someone would have pushed me more….” Source: “College Readiness and Academic Preparation for Postsecondary Education: Oral Histories of First-Generation Urban College Students,” M. Jeanne Reid and James L. Moore III, Urban Education Volume 43 Number 2, March 2008
JB (college student): “ Writing in college has been one of the most difficult things I have ever experienced. I would definitely change my curriculum back in high school to have the chance to do more writing and writing about topics that are more academic….I spent three years in ESL where we didn’t do as much writing…writing little essays, not a big research paper. Last semester I had to write three research papers. One was 20 pages, one was 15 pages, and one was 12 pages. They were all due back to back.” Source: “College Readiness and Academic Preparation for Postsecondary Education: Oral Histories of First-Generation Urban College Students,” M. Jeanne Reid and James L. Moore III, Urban Education Volume 43 Number 2, March 2008
J.B. (college student): “ Take AP classes and take the postsecondary courses. Get some college credit because colleges are accepting college credits (you earn) while you are in high school. Take AP classes. TAKE THEM! TAKE THEM! TAKE THEM! It will help you so much. And take a foreign language too!” Source: “College Readiness and Academic Preparation for Postsecondary Education: Oral Histories of First-Generation Urban College Students,” M. Jeanne Reid and James L. Moore III, Urban Education Volume 43 Number 2, March 2008
Terra (college student) “A lot of kids in high school, when they don’t understand something, they go straight to their teacher and ask for help….But if you automatically go to the teacher and they give you the answer, when you hit college, you’re going to want the answer and go to your professor, and they’re just going to look at you and tell you to go find the answer.” Source: “College Readiness and Academic Preparation for Postsecondary Education: Oral Histories of First-Generation Urban College Students,” M. Jeanne Reid and James L. Moore III, Urban Education Volume 43 Number 2, March 2008
The academically ready student can: • Demonstrate mastery of knowledge and skills required for college-level work in English, math and science • Analyze complex problems and develop sound solutions • Evaluate claims and hypotheses • Ask and investigate important questions about ideas, issues and the world • Evaluate and revise work for accuracy
Components of College Readiness • Academic Readiness • Admissions Readiness • Career Readiness • Financial Readiness • Personal and Social Readiness