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Preparing Students for Success in High School

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Preparing Students for Success in High School Setting Performance Standards: What Percentage of Eighth-graders Are Below Basic in Mathematics? Strategy One: Get the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preparing Students for Success in High School


1
  • Preparing Students for Success in High School

2
Setting Performance StandardsWhat Percentage of
Eighth-graders Are Below Basic in Mathematics?
SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
3
Strategy OneGet the Mission Right
  • All groups of students leaving grade eight are
    prepared for college-preparatory courses in grade
    nine.

SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
4
Getting the Mission Right Where Do We Stand?
SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
5
Strategy TwoDefining What Students Need to Know
and Do to Be Ready for High School
6
Readiness for High School Where Do We Stand?
  • Middle Grades Students
  • 81 plan further study after high school.
  • 37 had intensive literacy experiences.
  • 23 had intensive numeracy experiences.

SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
7
Strategy ThreeGetting Students Ready for High
School with Quality Extra Help and Time
8
Strategy FourGetting Good Principals for the
Middle Grades
9
Strategy FiveGetting Qualified Teachers in the
Middle Grades
10
Comparing Teacher Quality in Mathematics Classes
SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
11
Actions to Improve the Supply of New Teachers
with a Content Focus
  • Require at least a content minor for middle
    grades teaching by a set date.
  • Develop university programs that focus on the
    middle grades.
  • Assign teachers based on content focus.

SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
12
Conditions for Best Results for Career/Technical
Studies
SouthernRegionalEducationBoard
13
Condition One Combining In-depth Career Studies
with a Solid Academic Core
14
Percentages of Students Meeting Performance Goals
by Whether or Not They Completed the
HSTW-Recommended Academic Core and a Career
Concentration
15
Condition Two Effective Guidance and Advisement
  • Encourage students to take challenging
    mathematics and science courses
  • Assist students in planning a programof study by
    the end of grade nine
  • Involve parents
  • Provide information on postsecondary education

16
Percentages of Students Completing the
HSTW-recommended Curriculum in 2000
17
Percentages of Students Meeting the HSTW
Performance Goals in 2000
18
Condition ThreeIntegrating Academic Content
into Business and Technical Classes
19
Percentages of Students Who Met the HSTW
Performance Goals in 2000 by Whether or Not Their
Career/Technical Courses Integrated Academic
Content and Skills
20
Condition Four Structured Work-site Learning
  • Observing veteran workers
  • Having an assigned mentor
  • Being evaluated against clear standards
  • Learning customer relations
  • Using communication skills

21
Percentages of Students Meeting the HSTW
Performance Goals by Whether or Not They Had
Quality Work-based Learning Experiences
22
Condition FiveLeadership That Creates a Climate
of High Expectations
  • Teachers indicate the amount and quality of work
    expected
  • Students receive extra help
  • Students complete one or more hours of homework
    daily

23
Percentages of Students Who Met the HSTW
Performance Goals by Whether or Not They
Experienced a Climate of High Expectations
24
Reasons to Rethink the Purpose of High School
Career/Technical Studies
  • Over half of these students pursue postsecondary
    studies.
  • The new economy requires new skills.
  • The field needs a clear focus.

25
The Purpose Should Be to Produce Graduates Who
Can
  • Read, understand and communicate in the language
    of a career field
  • Use mathematics skills, reasoning and
    understanding
  • Understand technical concepts, principles and
    procedures
  • Use basic technology

26
Improving Career/Technical Studies Increase
access to challenging vocational and technical
studies, with a major emphasis on using
high-level mathematics, science, language arts
and problem-solving skills.
27
Vocational Practices andHigher Achievement
  • At least weekly, students
  • use mathematics to complete assignments
  • read and interpret technical books and materials
    to complete assignments
  • spend one hour reading non-school-related
    materials and
  • do math-related homework assigned by C/T teacher.

28
Vocational Practices andHigher Achievement
  • At least monthly, students
  • read a career-related article and demonstrate
    understanding
  • use computer skills to do assignments and
  • have challenging assignments.

29
Vocational Practices andHigher Achievement
  • Students
  • complete four or more credits in a planned
    sequence
  • do projects that require research and written
    plans
  • do a senior project
  • meet standards on a written exam to pass a
    course and
  • spoke to, interviewed and visited a person in a
    career-field to which they aspired.

30
Quality Vocational Studies and Higher Achievement
31
Quality Career/Technical Studies at Top 50
Schools and at All Schools
32
Actions for Increasing Opportunities for Quality
Career Studies
Making the Senior Year Count
  • Strengthen area vocational centers
  • Create choice technical high schools
  • Develop career academies
  • Use dual-enrollment courses
  • Locate high school programs on postsecondary
    campuses

33
Actions for Increasing Opportunities for Quality
Career Studies
Making the Senior Year Count
  • Create a charter technical high school
  • Create a virtual technical high school
  • Strengthen work-based learning
  • Fund new types of career/technical courses
  • End the general track

34
Comparison of Georgia High School with a Delaware
Technical High School with Comparative
Demographics
Georgia Average Score Delaware Average Score
4 years of college-prep English 41 271 (R) 98 298 (R)
4 years of Math 19 304 (M) 61 316 (M)
3 years of college prep science 49 295 (S) 100 311 (S)
35
What are shortcomingsof the present system for
preparing and certifying career/technical
teachers?
  • Many career/technical teachers lack an adequate
    academic foundation.
  • Some teachers do not have breadth and depth of
    technical knowledge.
  • Most teachers are not prepared to integrate
    career/technical and academic content to advance
    achievement.

36
Improving High SchoolsRequire Students to
Complete the HSTW-Recommended Curriculum
  • 4 credits in college-preparatory/honors English
  • At least 3 mathematics credits -- Algebra I and
    higher including mathematics the senior year
  • 3 credits in science, including 2 at
    thecollege-prep level
  • 4 credits in a planned sequence of career and
    technical studies or an academic concentration

37
Percentages of Students Meeting Performance Goals
at 45 Schools
38
Percentages of Students Meeting Performance Goal
by Program of Study at 45 Schools
39
Improving High Schools Require Schools to
Increase Annually the Percent of Students
Completing High School
40
Improving High Schools Develop End-of-Program
Exams That Count in Assessing Student Learning in
Career and Technical Courses
41
Improving High SchoolsMake the Senior Year Count
  • Give college placement tests at least by middle
    of Junior year of high school.
  • Have students spend one-half time in core
    academic studies.

42
Improving High Schools Increase Technical
Assistance to Low-Performing HSTW Schools to
Become High-Performing High Schools
43
What Actions Can States Take?
  • Raise graduation requirements.
  • Provide access to quality career/technical
    instruction.
  • Assess performance in selected core academic
    courses and make it count.
  • Use end-of-program exams that count for assessing
    student achievement in vocational courses.
  • Develop state policies on guidance and
    advisement.
  • Provide financial support for extra help.
  • Develop a middle grades/high school transition
    policy.
  • Provide technical assistance to low-performing
    schools.
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