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A high school diploma is not the last educational stop required

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A high school diploma is not the last educational stop required

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    2. A high school diploma is not the last educational stop required Jobs that require at least some postsecondary education already make up 61 percent of the labor force, and will make up more than two-thirds of new jobs.

    3. Postsecondary education: Destination for most graduates

    4. Too many graduates leave high school unprepared Nearly three in 10 first-year students are placed immediately into a remedial college course.

    5. Too many graduates leave high school unprepared College transcripts have shown that more than half of college students take at least one remedial course at some point.

    6. Most students who take remedial courses fail to earn degrees Many college students who need remediation, especially remedial reading, do not earn a degree.

    7. How many high school graduates are “college ready”? A recent study estimated the percentage of “college ready” students based on high school transcripts and reading test scores. Nevada and West Virginia had the lowest and highest college readiness.

    8. Professors, employers have similar concerns about graduates’ preparation

    9. The American Diploma Project Partnered with Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Nevada and Texas Involved wide variety of K-12, higher education and business representatives. Created end-of-high school benchmarks to convey the knowledge and skills graduates will need to be successful in college and the workplace. Key finding: Unprecedented convergence of skills required for success in college and work

    10. College- and workplace readiness benchmarks In English, the benchmarks cover: Language Communication Writing Research Logic Informational text Media Literature In math, the benchmarks cover: Number sense and numerical operations Algebra Geometry Data interpretations, statistics and probability

    11. Diploma Project’s expectations In math, graduates need skills traditionally taught in Algebra I & II, geometry, data and statistics courses. In English, graduates need strong reading, writing and oral communication skills equal to four years of grade-level coursework, as well as research and logical reasoning skills often associated with honors courses.

    12. Using graduation tests to set “floor” of performance 24 states have put high school graduation tests in place

    13. Achieve’s graduation test study Six states agreed to participate Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Ohio, and Texas Three fundamental questions What do the graduation tests actually measure? What does it take for students to pass the tests? How well do the tests measure what postsecondary educators, employers say matters? Released on June 10th

    14. The tests we analyzed

    15. What Do the Tests Measure? Math Content Across States The first aspect of the tests we looked at was the content they measured Looking at the broadest level, the math content on these six math tests looks close to what one would expect from a high school-level test The relative emphasis on number and data track well with NAEPThe first aspect of the tests we looked at was the content they measured Looking at the broadest level, the math content on these six math tests looks close to what one would expect from a high school-level test The relative emphasis on number and data track well with NAEP

    16. What Do the Tests Measure? Algebra Content Across States Looking more deeply in those four domains, however, we found a majority of points on the tests tied to the least demanding content. As you see here, most of algebra actually falls below the level of Algebra I. A little less than a third of the points track back to Algebra I level topics like linear equations or basic functions The same pattern of emphasis on the least challenging content emerged in geometryLooking more deeply in those four domains, however, we found a majority of points on the tests tied to the least demanding content. As you see here, most of algebra actually falls below the level of Algebra I. A little less than a third of the points track back to Algebra I level topics like linear equations or basic functions The same pattern of emphasis on the least challenging content emerged in geometry

    17. What Do the Tests Measure? Reading Content Across States In English language arts, the same basic patterns emerged. In terms of content in the reading portions of these tests, half the points are tied to questions of basic comprehension – things like vocabulary or main idea or theme. This emphasis doesn’t reflect what we see in state standards. While state standards often give informational topics equal weight with literary topics, these tests award nearly double the points to literary topics This focus on literary topics doesn’t track well with NAEP, which has a 60/40 split between informational and literary topicsIn English language arts, the same basic patterns emerged. In terms of content in the reading portions of these tests, half the points are tied to questions of basic comprehension – things like vocabulary or main idea or theme. This emphasis doesn’t reflect what we see in state standards. While state standards often give informational topics equal weight with literary topics, these tests award nearly double the points to literary topics This focus on literary topics doesn’t track well with NAEP, which has a 60/40 split between informational and literary topics

    18. What Do the Tests Measure? Reading Cognitive Demand More than two-thirds of the points on these tests went to the least cognitively demanding performance – simple recall and inference, which requires little beyond basic comprehension. Only a fifth of the points tracked back to requiring students to explain – provide details to support their answersMore than two-thirds of the points on these tests went to the least cognitively demanding performance – simple recall and inference, which requires little beyond basic comprehension. Only a fifth of the points tracked back to requiring students to explain – provide details to support their answers

    19. What does it take to pass English on adapted ACT scale? ACT uses items up to level 4 on its 8th/9th-grade EXPLORE test, up to level 5 on its 10th-grade PLAN test, and up to level 6 on its college admissions test for 11th and 12th graders. More than half of the college admissions test’s items can be at levels 5 or 6.

    20. What does it take to pass math on TIMSS international grade scale?

    21. Measuring college and workplace readiness In English Measure fundamental skills such as recognizing the theme or main idea Only FL and OH emphasize informational reading Very few questions target “critical reading” such as judging the credibility of sources or recognizing faulty reasoning Some states don’t test writing, use multiple-choice writing items In math Only 5 percent of points awarded for Algebra II 2-D geometry measured well, but little of 3-D concepts such as volume and surface area Basic number concepts measured well, but almost no ratios and proportionality About a fifth of the tests’ points awarded for vital skills of data analysis

    22. The MCAS story: More students passing exit exam

    23. The MCAS story: Passing rate gaps closing on exit exam

    24. The MCAS story: Moving more toward ADP-like standard

    25. The MCAS story: Progress toward ADP-like standard varies

    26. The MCAS story: Progress toward ADP-like standard varies

    27. Recommendations to states Don’t lower standards Content, cut scores reflects learning expected no later than 9th grade Don’t delay stakes Tests measure only a fraction of what colleges, employers consider vital Improve the tests over time Build more comprehensive assessment systems

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