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BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

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BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado. Donnell-Kay and Piton Foundation Hot Lunch Presentation Nov. 21, 2008 Robert Balfanz Everyone Graduates Center Johns Hopkins University. The Nation’s and Colorado’s Graduation Rate Crisis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION- Colorado Donnell-Kay and Piton Foundation Hot Lunch Presentation Nov. 21, 2008 Robert Balfanz Everyone Graduates Center Johns Hopkins University
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Page 1: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Donnell-Kay and Piton Foundation

Hot Lunch Presentation

Nov. 21, 2008

Robert Balfanz

Everyone Graduates Center

Johns Hopkins University

Page 2: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

The Nation’s and Colorado’s Graduation Rate Crisis Is an Economic Drain-In the 21st Century

Economic Growth is Driven by Human Capital-HS Dropouts are a net cost

Is the Engine of the Under-class-idleness rates-(neither in school nor the labor market) of 18 to 24 year old high school dropouts can approach 50%

If left unaddressed threatens the nation’s social fabric as it will create communities cut off from full participation in American society

Page 3: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Solving the Graduation Rate Crisis

Will ultimately pay for itself in increased tax revenues and decreased social welfare costs

Enable accelerated economic growth Reduce Crime Increase Social Justice

In Other words-the equivalent of the public policy triple crown

Page 4: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

And the Good News is it’s Doable

Page 5: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

SOLVING THE GRADUATION RATE CRISIS: FIVE COMPONENTS

Know who, when, where, and why students are dropping out

Transform schools

Develop comprehensive student support systems (in and out of school)

Establish supportive policies and resource allocations

Build community will and capacity

Page 6: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

KNOW WHO, WHEN, WHERE AND WHY STUDENTS ARE DROPPING OUT

Page 7: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

COLORADO’SGRADUATION CHALLENGE

Class of 2005-18,000 more 9th-graders than diplomas

Class of 2005-6,000 more 12th-graders than diplomas

Page 8: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado
Page 9: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

4 MAIN TYPES OF DROPOUTS Life events (forces outside of school cause

students to drop out)

Fade Outs (students do OK in school but stop seeing a reason for staying)

Push Outs (students who are or perceived to be detrimental to others in the school)

Failing in school, schools failing students

Page 10: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

EACH REQUIRES A DIFFERENT STRATEGY

Page 11: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

FAILING TO SUCCEED IN SCHOOL

In high poverty environments, these students typically constitute the majority of dropouts

Are easily identifiable using data routinely collected by schools

Can be identified at key junctures of secondary school when their odds for success are about to take a turn for the worse

Often persist in school for a long time before dropping out, despite years of struggles

Page 12: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

MAJOR FINDING

Students in high poverty school districts who successfully navigate grades 6 to 10 on time and on track, by and large, graduate from high school (75% or higher grad rates)

Students in high poverty school districts who struggle and become disengaged in the early secondary grades and particularly those who have an unsuccessful 6th and/or 9th grade transition do not graduate (20% or less grad rates)

Page 13: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

STUDENTS ARE KNOCKED OFF COURSE IN THE EARLY SECONDARY GRADESBY THE ABCS

Attendance Behavior Course Failure

Page 14: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

EFFECTIVE INTERVENTIONS AND PROVEN MODELS EXIST

Page 15: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

WHAT WE FACE IS A GIANT ENGINEERING CHALLENGE OF GETTING THE RIGHT INTERVENTIONS TO THE RIGHT STUDENTSAT THE RIGHT TIME WITH THE REQUIRED INTENSITY

Page 16: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

FOUR STEPS TOWARD ACHIEVING THIS

Page 17: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

STEP 1 COMPREHENSIVE, SYSTEMATIC AND SUSTAINED WHOLE SCHOOL REFORMS THAT ADDRESS ATTENDANCE, BEHAVIOR, AND COURSE PERFORMANCE

Limited reforms or partial implementation will lead to limited or partial success

Page 18: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Achievement Gain

GPA

Attendance

Behavior

Parental Involvement

Academic Press

Teacher Support

Utility

1

Intrinsic Interest

Figure 3Structural Equation Model

Environmental Context of Student Learnging and Achievement

Page 19: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Elementary Grades-Basic Academic Skills and Knowledge and socialized into the norms of schooling in a joyful manner

Middle Grades - Intermediate academic skills (reading comprehension and fluency, transition from arithmetic to mathematics) and a need for adventure and camaraderie

High School - Transition to adult behaviors and mind set and a path to college and career readiness, as well as the right extra help for students with below grade level skills

AT EACH KEY TRANSITION CONSIDER BOTH ACADEMIC AND SOCIAL NEEDS

Page 20: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

STEP 2LINK EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS TO INTERVENTIONS Need to be able to respond to the first signs

that a student is falling off track

Systematically apply school-wide preventative, targeted and intensive interventions until student is on-track

Great place to use national service organizations (City Year, Americorps) to provide mentoring, tutoring, homework support, and managing attendance and behavior programs at the needed scale for an affordable price

Need integrated student support providers (e.g. Communities in Schools) to bring in and monitor case-managed professional supports for the most in need students

Page 21: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

STEP 3INVOLVE THE COMMUNITY Community-specific data analysis to

establish how many students drop out, when and why to enable reforms to be targeted at the right students at the right scale and intensity

A community compact-multi-year plan to end the dropout crisis

Community can provide program managers not just incentives

Work with social service providers to coordinate efforts and make the case for investing social service dollars in school prevention efforts.

Page 22: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

STEP 4ARE EXISTING POLICIES AND PRACTICES SUPPORTIVE OF GRADUATION FOR ALL Attendance, grading, suspension, grade

promotion, and credit polices can implicitly and explicitly, knowingly and unknowingly enable or work against graduation for all

Need to conduct a policy audit at school, school district, and state levels

Page 23: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

FADE OUTS

Not easy to predict but don’t usually constitute the majority of dropouts.

Sometimes leave as late as the 12th grade only a few credits shy of graduation.

Often regret dropping out soon after they do. Many call it the worst decision of their lives.

Substantial numbers try to re-enter educational system.

Often need rapid credit acquisition opportunities linked with work opportunities.

Many need stronger college and career linkages to drive home the connection between high school graduation and future success.

Page 24: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

LIFE EVENTS

Often have very low graduation rates

Do not typically constitute the majority of dropouts

Need second chance opportunities and enhanced social supports to overcome life event

Page 25: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

IN LARGE CITIES THE SOCIAL SAFETY NET IS NOT WORKING

Page 26: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

FINAL STEPS:1. RESOURCE ALLOCATION

Need to integrate all youth development efforts toward keeping students on the graduation path college and career ready

Need to make sure that sufficient resources-human, social, and financial-are available to provide the scale of student supports required

Need to make data based decisions on resource allocation; need to take degree of educational difficulty into account as well as number and concentration of students in need of which supports

Page 27: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

FINAL STEPS:2. COMMUNITY COMPACTS

Communities bear the costs of the dropout crisis. they need to be part of the solution

Need a 5 to 10 year commitment

Need to bring together multiple sectors

Need data based plans and on-going evaluation

Page 28: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Colorado on the Cutting Edge:

Statewide Dropout Initiative: Five District Data Analysis

Page 29: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Background to Study

Governor Ritter declares goal of decreasing the dropout rate in Colorado 50% in ten years and establishes P-20 council to include subcommittee to examine dropout prevention and recovery

Several foundations establish Statewide Dropout Initiative, including

Colorado Children’s Campaign Colorado Foundation for Families and Children Colorado Youth for a Change Donnell-Kay Foundation

Five Colorado districts agree to participate in a data analysis initiative with Johns Hopkins University.

Page 30: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Research Questions:

How can understanding the behavioral characteristics of dropouts in the Colorado districts help inform efforts for dropout prevention and recovery?

To what extent are current 9th graders and MS students displaying warning signals of a potential dropout outcome?

Page 31: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Description of Research Study Analysis used de-identified student level

administrative data from districts Followed 2006-07 secondary students back in

time 4 years Constructed cohort of 2003-04 9th graders

when possible and followed forward to on-time graduation year (2006-07) to examine student outcomes

Identified characteristics distinguishing dropouts from graduates and others still in school

Examined dropout risk factors for current middle school and 9th grade students

Page 32: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Focused on Behavioral Warning Signals

To what extent are dropouts giving signals (even years in advance) that they are at risk of not graduating?

To what extent is a dropout outcome related to the ABCs identified in prior research:

Attendance Behavior Course Failure

To what extent are current middle school and 9th grade students displaying early warning signals through problems in these ABCs?

Page 33: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Summary of Findings

Most dropouts are giving warning signals even years in advance

Majorities of dropouts have at least one 9th grade semester failure (to some extent related to attendance and academic proficiency)

Failing even one or two semester courses in 9th grade dramatically reduces probability of on-time graduation

Dropouts have higher levels of suspensions than others, but this is not as strong a predictor of dropping out as course failure and attendance

Page 34: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

Recommendations Need to implement early warning systems and tiered

interventions in middle school and 9th grade, with follow-through in later grades

Reduction of the dropout rate will demand a commitment to providing recovery options within courses, before failure occurs (rather than only afterwards)

Interdisciplinary teams need to meet regularly to analyze student data, devise solutions, and monitor progress

Interventions to improve attendance and behavior must allow for continued in-school learning

Need comprehensive approach that has integrated prevention, intervention, and recovery elements and at the scale and scope required to cut the dropout rate in half (or by more).

Page 35: BUILDING A GRADUATION NATION-Colorado

TO LEARN MORE

* READ “WHAT YOUR COMMUNITY CAN DO TO END ITS DROPOUT CRISIS”

* USE “GRAD NATION GUIDEBOOK” FROM THE AMERICA’S PROMISE ALLIANCE

* VISIT WWW.EVERY1GRADUATES.ORG

* E-MAIL [email protected]


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