CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“NEW SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS RISK DROP IN GRAD
RATES”
As California teachers and students
open the new school year, they’re feeling proud of a recent trend toward
decreased dropouts and increased graduation rates.
But
several of the state’s largest urban districts are about to embark on new
course requirements that risk major reductions in those rates.
In response to complaints that college
prep courses are sometimes unavailable to minority students, the big districts
have adopted new rules forcing almost all students who want to graduate in 2016
and afterward to take such classes, even if they don’t plan to attend a
four-year school or even a community college.
The ambitious new requirements will
require high school students in the Oakland, San Diego, Los Angeles and San
Francisco districts to complete coursework needed for eligibility to attend the
University of California and the California State University system. This plan
has been used in San Jose since 2002, with opt-out provisions for some
students. Oakland also has an opt-out.
Opt-outs can be important because
state law requires districts to let anyone who has completed grade 10 to choose
between a traditional college prep curriculum or one that’s more career
oriented. So the new plans in the big districts include provisions for things
like “course substitutions,” but no one knows just how they will work or who
will use them.
Almost all graduates will have to take
three years of math, four years of English, two years of social studies
including U.S. history, two years of science with at least one lab class, two
years of a foreign language, one year of arts education and one year of an
academic elective. This plan is known as the “a-g sequence.”
That course load is stricter than
current state-mandated minimums for graduation, which include three years of
English, two of math and one year of a foreign language, in addition to two
years of physical education.
Making this a little less onerous for
those not particularly inclined toward academics, all the districts
involved start by saying grades of D or above will do in any course, with Los
Angeles to require C grades starting in 2017. A C is the minimum for any class
to count toward eligibility for the two big state university systems.
A study by the Public Policy Institute
of California concluded that the majority of the state’s high school graduates
do not now complete the soon-to-be mandatory sequence with a C or higher. In
2011, only 40.3 percent of graduates managed it, including 44 percent of
females and 36 percent of males.
Those numbers alone indicate that
graduation rates will drop unless school systems get heavily involved as early
as junior high in identifying and intensely working with students likely to
have problems managing academic courses.
Because African American and Hispanic
students now have low completion rates of “a-g” coursework, they will be most
at risk of not graduating. Allowing D work to count will help them, though, as
the PPIC study shows about twice as many Latino students in recent years have
passed the sequence with at least one D as have done it with only C’s or
better. But more than one-fourth of white and Asian students also did not get
through the sequence with nothing below a C.
The PPIC study focused hardest on San
Diego, finding that only 61.1 percent of that district’s 2011 graduates
finished the sequence even with a D average. How many wouldn’t graduate
starting in 2016 depends on how many courses in the sequence they fail and what
opportunities they get to better their grades.
The dangers of all this are clear:
-- It could lead to de-emphasis of vocational
and career education choices.
-- It could harm some students planning to attend private or
out-of-state colleges whose requirements don’t match those of the big
California systems. In San Diego, fully 12 percent of graduates fit into this
category and still enrolled at four-year colleges.
-- And unless school districts display
flexibility, it could raise the dropout rate considerably.
But there is also a strong upside: High
school graduates should
emerge with a
wider education than many now do. Combined with the state’s exit exam, that
could make high school diplomas mean far more than they usually have.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment