1 / 13

High School to College Success Report FAQs

Who is included in this report?. ACT-tested students in 2006-2008 grad classes that began college in the fall of 2006-2008 First-time, full-time freshmen Illinois public four-year colleges Illinois community colleges. High School to College Success Report FAQs. Who is not included

astin
Download Presentation

High School to College Success Report FAQs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Who is included in this report? ACT-tested students in 2006-2008 grad classes that began college in the fall of 2006-2008 First-time, full-time freshmen Illinois public four-year colleges Illinois community colleges High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  2. Who is not included in this report? Students attending private high schools Students attending postsecondary institutions outside Illinois Students attending private or proprietary postsecondary institutions High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  3. How is this report different than the High School Feedback Report? Information will be released to the 48 Community Colleges Information will be released to the 11 Public 4-Year Universities Information will be released to the public ISBE, ICCB, IBHE receive aggregate reports High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  4. What is the purpose of this report? To facilitate discussions between secondary and postsecondary institutions. To encourage data-driven decision making. To support secondary and postsecondary institutions in developing an articulated and aligned curriculum. To provide another tool to help to ensure success for all students. To help in the evolution toward an enhanced P20 longitudinal data system. High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  5. What will it provide? Accurate and comprehensive data on the academic performance of these students during their first year in higher education Information to review curriculum, standards, and expectations and to make revisions when appropriate to improve student success Data to make policy decisions to support collaboration between secondary and postsecondary institutions, as well as alignment between secondary and postsecondary standards and expectations High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  6. What will schools receive? Student performance (GPA) at 2 or 4-year public postsecondary institutions. How your students performed compared to state average. College Readiness Benchmark Scores by subject area. Aggregate data on your enrolled students’ performance in college, with data broken down by school/college. Summary statistics of your students who did/did not take core coursework. High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  7. What will schools receive…cont. Student performance by high school course sequence patterns in math and science. Average GPAs by ACT College Readiness Standards score ranges. Student performance in credit bearing and developmental courses. Summary statistics of those who persistence from year one to year two of postsecondary career. High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  8. What is the dissemination plan? ACT will disseminate the report with a cover letter from ISBE, IBHE, and ICCB, to the participating secondary and postsecondary institutions. June 24th Summit Posted on three education agency websites. Interactive Illinois Report Card (IIRC) will host Individual High School Reports. The report will be widely available. Series of fall workshops High School to College Success ReportFAQs

  9. What guiding questions should Secondary be asking about the report? High School to College Success ReportFAQs • What information in this report is new to us? • How will this report enhance our • understanding of the colleges that our students attend? • How can this report be used as a tool to assist in the college guidance we give to our students? • How can this report inform early intervention efforts designed to reduce our students’ need for remediation in college? • How can this report inform secondary to postsecondary conversations about articulation of curriculum?

  10. What guiding questions should PostSecondary be asking about the report? High School to College Success ReportFAQs • What information in this report is new to us? • How will this report enhance our • understanding of the high schools that feed into our institutions? • How can this report be used as a tool to assist in the recruitment/admission/placement of incoming students? • How can this report inform early intervention efforts designed to reduce the need for remediation in college? • How can this report inform secondary to postsecondary conversations about articulation of curriculum?

  11. What common guiding questions should we be asking about the report? What concrete steps can we take to use this information to promote an ongoing dialogue with faculty, school boards, and other stake-holders? What information in this report can be used to inform others about the success of our schools? How can this report inform secondary to postsecondary conversations about articulation of curriculum? What information on this report can be used to enhance the collaboration between our high schools and colleges? How should we prepare to present this information to the public? High School to College Success ReportFAQs

More Related