Title: Alternative Education: Last best chance or dumping ground
1Alternative Education Last best chance or
dumping ground?
- John W Gardner Center, Stanford University
- National Center for Urban School Transformation,
San Diego State University - March 24 2008
2Organization of the session
- History of Alternative Education Policies in CA
Devon Williamson - System contexts Milbrey McLaughlin
- School contexts Jorge Ruiz-de-Velasco
- Student perspectives Lynne Perez
- Discussant Norman Fruchter
3Research Goal
- Describe continuation high school policies and
practices on the ground what they look like, how
and why they vary, and consequences for students
4Sample Strategy An Embedded Context Design
- We selected
- Counties that represented diverse CA economic
demographic contexts 9 counties - Within counties, districts that differed in size,
metro status, and alternative education menu
26 districts - Within districts, continuation high schools that
differed in size student outcomes 40 schools
5Respondents
- Principals of both continuation traditional
high schools - Teachers and students
- District administrators
- County Office of Education administrators,
Regional Opportunity Programs - Representatives of various county community
youth-serving agencies juvenile justice, mental
health, child protective services, foster care
6Legislative History of Alternative Education The
Policy Context of Continuation High Schools
- John W. Gardner Center for Youth and Their
Communities - Stanford University School of Education
- Devon Williamson
- Prepared for the AERA Annual
Meeting, New York - March 24, 2008
7Agenda
- Introduction
- Conceptual Framework
- Policy history 1917-present
- Implications
Introduction
Framework
Policy History
Implications
8Agenda
- Introduction
- Conceptual Framework
- Policy history 1917-present
- Implications
Introduction
Framework
Policy History
Implications
9Agenda
- Introduction
- Conceptual Framework
- Policy history 1917-present
- Implications
Policy History
Introduction
Framework
Implications
10Agenda
- Introduction
- Conceptual Framework
- Policy history 1917-present
- Implications
Introduction
Framework
Policy History
Implications
11Research Question
- How has continuation education evolved in
response to Californias changing social,
political, and economic demands? - What does continuations status as a decoupled
system at the intersection of social services,
juvenile justice and public education mean for
todays students?
12Organizational Behavior
- Structural holes exist between diverse clusters
of organizations serving the same population of
at risk youth (Burt, 1992) - Public education
- Social welfare system
- California youth authority
- Meyer Rowan, 1991
- Isomorphism, legitimacy, efficiency
- Decoupling
13Decoupling Strategies
- Lack of managerial oversight
- Ambiguous, un-measurable goals
- Ceremonial evaluation
- Reliance on personal relationships to coordinate
activities
14Continuation Eras Types
- Four eras of CE (Kelly, 1993 Hwang, 2003)
- 1917-1930 Part-time school for young workers
- 1931-1944 Vocational ed to vocational guidance
- 1945-1964 Adjustment education
- 1965-present Dropout recovery
- Typology of current CHS
- Safety net, safety valve, cooling out (Kelly,
1993) - Student-centered, student reformed, dumping
ground (Ruiz-De-Velasco, 2008)
15Industry Assimilation1917-30
- 1917 Smith-Hughes Act
- 1919 Part-Time Education Act (PTE)
- 1923 CSBE Bulletin 23 on PTE
- 1926 CSBE Biennial report
- 1929 PTE Amendment
16Truancy Guidance1931-44
- 1930 peak enrollment
- Great Depression - guidance focus
- 1937 California Journal of Secondary Ed.
- Burdened educator
- Student characteristics - the moron and the
genius, the social misfit and the socially unfit
(Trout)
17Adjustment Education1945-64
- World War II increase in working students
- 1945 Continuation high schools
- 1947 Average daily attendance - 3 hours
- Adjustment education movement
18Dropout Recovery1965-present
- 1965-67 long-term suspension legislation
- 1967 Elementary credentialed teachers
- 1980 Revenue Add-on
- 1987 Humanist goals
- 2001 Alternative Schools Accountability
Model (ASAM) - 2002 Categorical funding eligibility
19Continuation Decoupled
- Designed outside mainstream education with
indirect, local management in mind - Ambiguous authorizing legislation goals
- Limited accountability via data blackout and ASAM
- Individual educators and administrators determine
resources and opportunities
20Implications
- Significant variation in the quality and quantity
of opportunities available to continuation
students by design - Reliance on local decision makers to determine
what continuation looks like, with little record
keeping or accountability - Lack of state and public oversight and no real
advocates for continuation education
21Alternative Education Options in CaliforniaA
view from counties and districts
- Milbrey McLaughlin, Grace Atukpawu,
- Devon Williamson
- Stanford University
- AERA March 24, 2008
22Who attends CA continuation high schools?
- 117,000 students attend 520 CHS
- 52 were enrolled for 90 days or more
- Racial minorities 55 Hispanic 11 black 4
Asian 27 white - Students with behavioral challenges drug use,
weapons, fighting, - English Learnersgreater than statewide average
EL enrollment
23Overarching findingSignificant variation in
continuation high schools quality, mission and
student outcomes promising practices lost
opportunities and wasted resources
24The system perspective
- What do continuation high school policies and
practices look like at county and district
levels? Sources of variation?
25Diverse County Contexts for Continuation High
Schools
- Balkanized county-level youth services extent
of coordination - Variable capacity of broad youth-serving
infrastructure - Different views of CHS youth population
- Problem to be managed
- Active youth-development stancecollaboration
across agencies to support comprehensive view of
youth services
26Different district contexts for CHS
- Benign neglect 10 acceptable loss kids
- Struggling episodic support for CHS programs-
traditional high schools receive priority - Intentional youth development stance commitment
to CHS goals and studentsparity, political
support for alternative education
27How county contexts mattered for districts
schools
- Relationships with/operation of Community Day
Schools and Community Schools - Relationships with foster care, mental health,
juvenile justice other youth-serving agencies - Level of resources and services available to CHS
programs and students - Coherence and articulation of resources and
opportunities available to CHS
28How district contexts mattered for continuation
schools
- Staffing strategies dumping ground or committed,
qualified staff - Equity in resource allocation educational
supplies, professional services, facilities,
number of CHS seats - Different CHS menus, missions and student
assignment policies - Attention to articulation of/support for student
pathways
29Factors affecting county district contexts
resources supports
- Local economy
- Personal networks relationships
- Leadership political support for CHS mission
and students - History of collaboration
- Express commitment to a youth development stance
and continuum of care
30Factors affecting district contexts for
continuation high schools
- Differences in local contextsdistrict size,
local demographics and economy - Presence of district school-level leadership
and proactive commitment to alternative education - Personal networks and relationships to support
CHS programs and students
31Alternative Education in Continuation High
SchoolsMeeting the Needs of Over-aged,
Under-credited Youth
- Jorge Ruiz-de-Velasco
- University of California, Berkeley
- AERA March 24, 2008
32Accountability Issues
- Goal Ambiguity
- Formal State Goals/Local Enacted Goals
- Weak School-Level Accountability
- Reflects ambiguity about goals what/how to
properly assess these alternative schools - Increasing Student-level Accountability
33Resource Issues(State Constraints on Local
Action)
- California has among the most highly centralized
school finance systems among the states. - Continuation High Schools conceived as small
versions of comprehensive schools within the
finance system - Staffed similarly to other schools of similar
size - Staffing formulas driven by state per-pupil
allocation - Teachers
- Pupil Services (e.g., Counselors, Nurses, etc)
- Classified Staff (e.g., Teacher Aides,
Librarians)
34Major Question What accounts for success
despite supra-local constraints?
- We over-samples for schools that
- Were state-designated as Model Schools
- Were making AYP and other progress markers
- Where made them different?
35Role of District Leaders and Boards
- Providing additional Resources Support
(Priority) - Empowering the School Staff
- ESP Enabling control over identification
placement - Enabling collaboration between sending schools
and CHS
36Role of School Leaders
- Principals
- Training Experience
- Beliefs and Values
- Teachers
- Individual Beliefs and Inititative central in a
weak accountability environment
37Role of School Partnerships
- Links to Regional Occupation Programs
- Links to Employers CBOs
- Links to Community Colleges
- Productive Links to County Agencies (Law
Enforcement, Parks Recreation, Mental Health) - AGAIN Linked to individual leadership in
absence of strong accountability system that
makes these relationships systematic.
38Continuation High Schools An Inside Look at
Californias Primary Dropout Intervention Program
- Lynne G. Perez and Joseph F. Johnson
- National Center for Urban School Transformation
- San Diego State University
- Misty M. Kirby
- The College of William and Mary
39An inside look
- What is the mission of continuation high school?
- Who are the students?
- How do students come to continuation education?
- What is the student experience?
- What emerge as critical system elements?
40What is the mission of continuation high school?
- Provide diploma programs that reconnect students
to learning - Attend to students academic and interpersonal
needs - Develop students civic responsibility
- Create pathways to post-secondary education or
training
41Who are the students?
- Credit deficient, chronically absent, disengaged
from school - Younger and older than 16-18 years of age
- Lacking fundamental literacy skills
- Gifted
- Poor interpersonal/organizational skills
- Range of personal and family issues
42How do students come to continuation education?
- By referral
- Voluntarily and involuntarily
- Through a formal process, or an informal
negotiation between schools - As needed year-round, or at specific intervals
43What is the student experience?
44What is the school environment?
- Smaller with fewer distractions
- Climate of acceptance, support, school as family
- Clear consequences, stability
- Strong student/adult relationships
- 3 to over 6 hours of instructional time
- Class size varies from _at_ 20 over 30
45What is the curriculum?
- Core subjects, aligned with state standards
- High school exit exam preparation courses
- Some literacy intervention programs
- Parenting/life skills
- Career/post-secondary coursework
- Few electives
46How is the curriculum delivered?
- Independent study (self-paced)
- Direct instruction
- Mixed methods
- Project based, portfolios
- Units of study, looping the curriculum
- Questions of rigor
47What support systems are available to students?
- Overall, uneven access
- Teachers/staff as counselors
- A few have substantial counseling programs
- Some advisory programs
- Pregnant/parenting teen programs
48How do continuation schools help prepare students
for the next step?
- Verbal encouragement
- Help with applications, exams, speakers
- Scholarships
- Work experience/internships
- ROP, some vocational technical/career education
- Joint diploma/middle college
49What emerge as critical system elements?
- A more explicit purpose
- More extensive data-collection systems
- Intake, curriculum, instruction, program design,
and services aligned to student needs and program
purpose - Supportive relationships
50Alternative Education Last best chance or
dumping ground?
- John W Gardner Center, Stanford University
- National Center for Urban School Transformation,
San Diego State University - March 24 2008