College Vocational Certificates May Not Help Students In The Labor Market

Provided by Gay Clyburn at Carnegie Foundation

THE NEWEST COLLEGE CREDENTIAL
Short vocational programs leading to a certificate are becoming the kudzu of the educational world. In an economy that increasingly rewards specialization, more and more institutions – from the ones that advertise on late-night cable to the most elite of universities – are offering these programs, typically a package of five or six courses, for credit or not, taken over three to 18 months. Some cost a few thousand dollars, others tens of thousands. Are they worth the paper they’re printed on? Not always. The article was in Education Life in The New York Times.

Implementing K-12 Common Core Curriculum For College Readiness Will Take Years

Most states plan to revise professional development for teachers by next year to help them teach to the new common core standards, but it will take two or more years to complete anticipated changes in curriculum, assessment and other elements of the K-12 system to adapt to college ready goals, according to a Center on Education Policy survey. Common Core is designed to better link k-12 curriculum to college readiness, but this survey is another indicator of how long it will take. Forty states have adopted common core.

Early College In North Carolina Shows Promise


North Carolina has become an incubator of early college high schools, with one-third of the total in the country. A new one will be launched at N.C. State University. North Carolina has 71 early colleges with 15,000 students – more than any other state. Students in the schools have better attendance records, lower suspension rates and higher participation in college prep classes, according to early results from a study.  Early college allows high school students to enroll in college courses and programs. North Carolina makes sure community colleges are a major focus.

This Blogger Appointed To California State Board Of Education

Governor Jerry Brown appointed me to the Board yesterday. Here is the formal announcement:

Dr. Michael Kirst, of Stanford, has been appointed to the California State Board of Education.  He currently serves as a Professor Emeritus at Stanford University, where he has taught since 1969.   Previously, Kirst served on the California State Board of Education under Governor Brown from 1975 to 1982. Kirst also served as the Director of Program Planning for the U.S. Office of Education and was Staff Director for the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Manpower, Employment, and Poverty from 1967 to 1969.  Kirst is a Democrat

ACT Reading Speed Is Faster Than SAT To Obtain A High Score

This in response by guest blogger Michele Kerr to the prior blog concerning the SAT reading assessment.. Kerr has been a public high school teacher and test prep instructor for college admissions tests.

I found the subject matter of your last two posts ironic, in that the complaint about “speed reading” for the SAT is juxtaposed with the ACT’s report on “college readiness”. As usual, the SAT is the object of critical scrutiny, much of it unfair, while the ACT is ignored, for both better and worse.

The SAT has three reading sections, 67 questions in 70 minutes. 19 of those questions are sentence completions, 48 are questions on 8 reading passages–4 short passages of 100 words, with one long one of 850 words. The total word count is about 2800. The sentence completions require 3 to 5 minutes (sections have 5, 6, or 8 SCs), allowing 15-20 minutes per section for answering 13-17 questions on 2-3 passages. That’s plenty of time for even the weakest reader to finish.

The ACT, while a much better test overall, has absurd time constraints on its reading and science sections. Testers have 35 minutes  to complete 4 750-word passages with 10 questions each–just 8.5 minutes per passage, 3000 total words.   The science section has seven passage of complex reading and figure interpretation to be completed in 35 minutes–just five minutes per passage.

When I coach low income, struggling students, I always used the ACT instead of the SAT because students could more easily decipher the questions. But I know that many of their scores would have been much higher had they a bit more time per section. I would often see students complete two or three reading sections with a fair degree of accuracy, but not have time to finish the test. The ACT would report them as “not ready for college” when in fact their reading speed is simply not equal to that of top students–while their reading comprehension is perfectly adequate.

The ACT  could be so much better if it allowed ten minutes more each on the reading and science sections (and ten minutes on the math wouldn’t hurt). It’s half an hour shorter than the SAT and has over 60 more questions, so there’s no reason they couldn’t tack on another twenty minutes. Contrary to received wisdom, the ACT is not an easier test, and giving additional time would not ease the considerable difficulty of its hardest questions. The math test asks trig questions, always has a complex number (i) question, and the occasional ellipse and matrix question, while the SAT barely tiptoes into second year algebra.  Unlike the SAT, however, ACT questions are relatively uncomplicated. The student reads the question and can move directly to figuring out the answer (which is often quite difficult). SAT questions in both reading and math are abstract and “front loaded” with difficulty–it takes cognitive skill just to figure out what the question is asking. Additional time isn’t going to help.

If SAT testers were given an additional 15 minutes per section, I predict that scores would not noticeably improve. If ACT testers were given an additional 15 minutes per section, my sense is that reading, science, and math scores in the bottom percentiles would see a good-sized bump.

If the purpose of the test is to sort out the fast thinkers, then fine. But the ACT purports to test college readiness, and its declarations about what college applicants are and aren’t prepared to do simply aren’t credible, in light of the severe time constraints. And it makes no sense at all to complain about the SAT’s time requirements, which simply aren’t onerous for even the weakest skilled students.

Researcher Criticizes SAT Emphasis on Speed Reading

In Praise of Slow Reading
by Thomas Newkirk
This commentary argues against the high valuation schools place on reading speed, particularly on high sakes tests like the SAT. In penalizing slower readers, these and other tests put at a disadvantage students who approach their reading in a deliberate and thorough way. The ideal should not be speed but the tiempo guisto, the pace at which we are most attentive and effective-and this pace will vary depending on the individual and the task.

Source: Teachers College Record on line

ACT Study Shows Most Students Cannot Meet Standards For College Success

Most students have far to go before they master the skills and knowledge outlined in the new common standards, concludes an ACT Inc. report. The study found that only one-third to one-half of 11th graders are proficient in the content and skills that the common core standards specify as necessary in math and English/language arts for access to good jobs or success in entry-level, credit-bearing college courses.  Forty states have now approved the common core standards, but implementation will be difficult.

Study Finds Complex Patterns In College Grading Of Students

Grading in American Colleges and Universities
by Stuart Rojstaczer & Christopher Healy
Here we report on historical and recent grading patterns at American four-year colleges and universities. Records of average grades show that since the 1960s, grading has evolved in an ad hoc way into identifiable patterns at the national level. The mean grade point average of a school is highly dependent on the average quality of its student body and whether it is public or private. Relative to other schools, public-commuter and engineering schools grade harshly. Superimposed on these trends is a nationwide rise in grades over time of roughly 0.1 change in GPA per decade. These trends may help explain why private school students are disproportionately represented in Ph.D. study in science and engineering and why they tend to dominate admission into the most prestigious professional schools. They also may help explain why undergraduate students are increasingly disen gaged from learning and why the US has difficulty filling its employment needs in engineering and technology.

Source: Teachers College Record On Line

The Risks Of Placing Underprepared Students In AP Courses

Below is a provocative op ed by Michele Kerr who cautions about the placement policies concerning AP in some high schools. AP enrollment has soared over the past 15 years.

http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_16923216?IADID=Search-www.mercurynews.com-www.mercurynews.com&nclick_check=1

Colleges Try To Increase Graduation Rates By Bringing Back Former Students

Bringing Adults Back to College: Designing and Implementing a Statewide Concierge Model
This brief details efforts by the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education and their work with six states – Arkansas, Colorado, Nevada, New Jersey, North Dakota and South Dakota – to identify students who have earned a substantial amount of college credits but have not returned to complete their degree.