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The American High School

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... literature Art: Drawing, Painting, Sculpture, Jewelry Music Physical Education= Gym ... well-paying fields Decline in majors like philosophy, history ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The American High School


1
The American High School
  • How It Shapes Our College Freshmen

2
A Few Facts
  • No national curriculum each state can set own
    standards
  • Each teacher has freedom to decide what to teach
  • Each teacher decides how to test, how many tests
    to give, how to grade tests

3
StudentsWho Goes Where?
  • The public schools are free to all students who
    live in the geographical region
  • For example E.O.Smith serves 3 towns
    Mansfield, Ashford and Willington
  • Buses pick up students at their homes or close to
    their homes to transport them to school
  • The schools must accept all students regardless
    of learning disabilities or physical handicaps

4
What Do They Do There?
  • Classes run from 725 a.m. to 210 p.m.
  • Your classes are chosen for you by meeting with a
    guidance counselor who checks to see that you
    will have the right classes to graduate
  • The school year is approximately 36 weeks some
    classes go all year, some change at midterm

5
Typical Classes
  • Science Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Earth
    Science
  • Mathematics Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II,
    Pre-Calculus
  • Social Sciences World Civ, American History,
    Geography
  • English Tech prep, college prep, literature
  • Art Drawing, Painting, Sculpture, Jewelry
  • Music
  • Physical Education Gym required first 3 years
  • Foreign Language Spanish, French, Latin, German

6
Andafter school!
  • Sports Football, basketball, soccer, tennis,
    golf, track, volleyball, cheerleading
  • Clubs Chess, Math, Latin, Ski, Drama, French,
    etc.
  • Music Band, orchestra, jazz ensemble
  • Drivers Ed--students can get license at 16 must
    have drivers ed course state regulation

7
So, the typical H.S. student is
  • Well-rounded or has a superficial knowledge of
    many things?
  • NOT prepared to be an independent learner
  • NOT sure what s/he wants to study or has parents
    telling him/her what to study
  • NOT sure what do with all the free hours in a day
    at college/or working all the free hours!

8
High School to College
  • How does this translate into what happens in
    college?

9
Who comes to UConn?
  • 35 entering freshmen in top 10 of high school
    class
  • 79 in top 25
  • 80 Connecticut residents
  • Average SAT score 1177 (national average is 1026)

10
A Little History
  • 1940 16 of population attended college
  • 1961 48 High school grads went to college
  • 1981 53.9
  • 2001 61.7
  • Between 1991-2 and 2001-2 tuition at public
    colleges rose 21 private 26

11
Which means
  • Students are increasingly less elite
  • Average student is less affluent
  • 2004 increases in tuition during preceding
    decade outpaced inflation and growth of median
    family income
  • DEBT college students incurring debt and working
    while in school

12
Who leaves UConn?
  • Graduation rate within 6 years 71
  • To repay debts students choose practical majors
    well-paying fields
  • Decline in majors like philosophy, history,
    English
  • Increase in business, computer science, health
    professions
  • Market driven, market focused universities

13
Your job then is
  • Figure out how to deal with a class of students
    who have totally different backgrounds and levels
    of preparation
  • Encourage/motivate them to do the work and keep
    up
  • Teach them how to study in your field
  • Remember they will not learn like you did!

14
Things to Think About
  • Major differences between U.S. High school
    system and your countrys?
  • How will these differences show up in the college
    classroom?
  • Is there anything youll need to change about
    your teaching style?

15
Prepared by Catherine Ross Institute for
Teaching Learning University of
Connecticut Bibliography Nathan, R. (2005) My
Freshman YearWhat a Professor Learned by
Becoming a Student, Cornell University Press.
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