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Georgia Academy for Economic Development Spring 2014

Georgia Academy for Economic Development Spring 2014. Examine the Data for Education in Georgia. Academic Achievement Milestones. School Readiness. Literacy by 3 rd Grade. Numeracy by 8 th Grade. High School Graduation. Workforce and/or College Ready. School Readiness.

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Georgia Academy for Economic Development Spring 2014

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  1. Georgia Academy for Economic Development Spring 2014

  2. Examine the Data for Education in Georgia

  3. Academic Achievement Milestones School Readiness Literacy by 3rd Grade Numeracy by 8th Grade High School Graduation Workforce and/or College Ready

  4. School Readiness Percent of Children with School Readiness Skills

  5. NAEP 4th Grade Reading Percent At or Above Proficient

  6. NAEP 8th Grade Math Percent At or Above Proficient

  7. Georgia High School Graduation Rates Source: The Governor’s Office of Student Achievement, State Report Cards.

  8. Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates

  9. Education Pays Source:*U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Table A-4. Employment status of the civilian population 25 years and over by educational attainment. **U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Table 5. Quartiles of usual weekly earnings of full-time wage and salary workers.

  10. High School Graduation Rates by County, 2012

  11. Unemployment Rate by County, May 2013

  12. Compounded Impacts of High School Non-Completion Source: Levin, H., et al., (2007). The Costs and Benefits of an Excellent Education for All of America’s Children.

  13. Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline

  14. Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline

  15. Disparities in Early Vocabulary Growth Professional Families 1,116 words Working Class Families 749 words Welfare Families 525 words Source: Hart, B. and Risley, T. R. (2003). “The Early Catastrophe: The 30 Million Word Gap by Age 3.”

  16. Economic Benefits of Early Education: Perry Preschool Study Source: Schweinhart, L.J., et al. (2005). Lifetime effects: The High/Scope Perry Preschool study through age 40.

  17. Achievement Gap as Children Enter Kindergarten

  18. Essential Building Blocks of High Performing States • Higher Standards • Rigorous Curriculum • Clear Accountability System • Statewide Student Information System • Leadership Training

  19. Important! Standards are the “What” Standards are the overall goal we hope our children achieve. Curriculum is the “How” Curriculum is the individual teaching methodology used in the classroom.

  20. Why Do We Need Common Standards? • Rigor • Ready for life’s next steps • Clarity • Teachers, parents, and students have same expectations • Consistency • In content • In levels of rigor • Across state lines • Collaboration • Sharing of best practices • Sharing of materials • For additional information, visit • Better Standards for a Better Georgia • http://betterstandards4georgia.com

  21. The Changing Face of Georgia

  22. 4-Year Graduation Rate, 2011

  23. 100 Georgia Ninth Graders * Data provided by the Technical College System of Georgia . Based on 2008 graduation data

  24. Georgia Needs:The Economic Development Pipeline 60% of jobs in 2020 will require some higher education 42% of Georgian’s currently have a post-secondary degree 250,000 new post-secondary graduates by 2020

  25. HS Graduates and Economic Development • With an additional 30,000 HS graduates: • $242 million increased earnings • $191 million increased spending • This additional spending would support: • $350 million increase in state gross product • $18 million increase in state tax revenue Source: Alliance for Excellent Education. “The Economic Benefits of Helping High School Dropouts.” December 2012.

  26. Predicted Workforce Gap Georgia’s Young Workforce with a Certificate or College Degree 60% Complete College Georgia 250,000 additional graduates 42% 43% Current Path 2012 2020 Source: Complete College Georgia,: Georgia’s Higher Education Completion Plan 2012

  27. Georgia’s Future Workforce 1. Increasing demand for highly skilled labor force 3. Increasing academic rigor and expectations + 2. Changing demographics + = Perfect Storm? Trifecta of Opportunity?

  28. What can we do?

  29. Profile of Child Wellbeing and Academic Achievement

  30. Teen Birth Rates Per 1,000 * Data provided by Georgia Kids Count, Georgia Family Connection Partnership, http://www.gafcp.org

  31. Percent Children Living in Poverty * Data provided by Georgia Kids Count, Georgia Family Connection Partnership, http://www.gafcp.org

  32. Percent Teens Not Working or in School * Data provided by Georgia Kids Count, Georgia Family Connection Partnership, http://www.gafcp.org

  33. Percent 3rd Grade Reading, Meets/ Exceeds * Georgia Department of Education

  34. Percent 8th Grade Math, Meets/ Exceeds * Data provided by the Georgia Department of Education

  35. Profile of Achievement– High School Graduation * Data provided by the Georgia Department of Education

  36. ESSENTIAL COMMUNITY SERVICES Transportation Health Housing Financial LEARNING & SOCIAL SUPPORTS Childcare Providers Afterschool Programs Civic Opportunities Academic Supports Job Training How Will You Insulate the Birth to Work Pipeline? K – 12 System Early Childhood Post Secondary Work & Career Source: The Forum for Youth Investment

  37. Help Insulate the Pipeline Early Childhood Read to children every day Quality Rated: Encourage participation of your early learning centers K – 12 System Pay for Advanced Placement exams Leverage partnerships with business and post-secondary Build a cadre of effective teachers and leaders Post Secondary Provide internships/ apprenticeships Be involved as a community volunteer in Georgia Apply to College Help recruit WWGTF candidates.

  38. Random Acts of Improvement Aligned Acts of Improvement Aligning Educational Strategies GOALS GOALS

  39. Connect with us Twitter: @GAPartnership Facebook: Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education Instagram: @GAPARTNERSHIP LinkedIn: Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education Website: www.gpee.org

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