Embed
Email

The High School � College Disconnect

Document Sample
The High School � College Disconnect
Shared by: HC111124122955
Categories
Tags
Stats
views:
0
posted:
11/24/2011
language:
English
pages:
24
The High School –

College Disconnect

presented to: The Coastal Bend

Mathematics Collaborative, 11/14/05

G. Donald Allen

Department of Mathematics

Texas A&M University

Why are we here?

 To consider the connections and disconnections

between secondary and postsecondary

institutions.

 To develop an awareness of K-12 issues.

 To develop an awareness of college realities for

our students.

 To find common ground across the bridge

between high school and college.

Where do we stand?

 Enrollment in college has remained steady at

44% of the graduating class.

 Texas sends fewer students to college than

other states (33% of 9th graders)

 72% of growth in college enrollment is in two

year colleges. (565k vs 483k)

 College readiness is a focus area by the THECB

 Texas now has an Educator Quality and P-16

Initiatives division of TEA

Two-year colleges had 88,007 additional students, 2000 to 2003

Universities increased by 58,192 from 2000 to 2003

Where do we stand?



 Value Added in High School Declined

During the Nineties

 Too Few 17 Year-Olds Demonstrate

Strong Math Skills.

Low-Income Students More Likely to End

Up in 2-Year Colleges and Proprietary

Institutions: 1995-96

Middle- and

Upper- 4 42 34.2 20.1

income









Low-income 21 50 19.2 10









0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

For Profit 2-Year Public 4-yr Private 4-yr





Source: American Council on Education, Center for Policy Analysis, Crucial Choices: How Students’ Financial Decisions

Affect Their Academic Success using The National Postsecondary Student Aid Study: 1995-96 (NPSAS) & Beginning

Postsecondary Students 1996/98 (BPS)

College Freshmen Not Returning

for Sophomore Year

 4 yr colleges 26%

 2 yr colleges 45%









Retention is a priority on most campuses

Graduating…

 The statewide six-year graduation rate is

52 percent, while the national rate is about

55 percent.



 Nationwide, only half (52%) of full-time,

first-time freshmen at four-year institutions

earn a bachelor’s degree within five years

Comparisons

Of every 100 kindergarten children…

White African American Latino

Graduate from high

school 93 87 63

Complete some

college 65 51 32

Obtain a bachelor's

degree 32 17 11

BUT… About 40% of white students, 23% of African-

American students, and 20% of Hispanic students who

started public high school graduated college-ready in

2002.

What is College Readiness?

 Dual credit courses

 Texas Success Initiative (TSI) (formerly

TASP)

 THEA,ASSET, COMPASS and

ACCUPLACER

 Standards for test exemption: SAT – 1070

combined; ACT – 23 composite; TAKS –

2200 in math

Texas Success Initiative

 Effective September 1, 2003, the Texas Academic Skills

Program (TASP) ceased to exist,

 Texas Success Initiative (TSI) was implemented for all

public colleges and universities.

 TSI is focused on using a statewide standard for

assessing college level readiness skills of all entering

undergraduate students at public colleges and

universities.

 New students are assessed on their reading, writing and

math skills, then academically advised and placed in

developmental level courses if necessary.

Why higher education?

 70% of the 30 fastest-growing jobs will

require an education beyond high school.

 40% of all new jobs will require at least an

associate’s degree.





Bureau of Census & Education Trust,1999

More Data…

 2.5 million students graduate from high

school annually

 70% go on to post-secondary education

within two years

 50% of those take remedial courses –

often in several subjects

College is important for life…



Salaries for adults aged 25



 With a high school diploma, $24,267

 With an associate’s degree, $26,693

 With a bachelor’s degree, $40,314



U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2001

Today’s topics

 Assessment in high school vs. college

 computational vs. analytical questions

 calculators, yes or no?

 test taking strategizing



 Placement exams vs. TAKS vs. College Exams

 Scoring correction awareness

 Critical transition points

Today’s topics

 College readiness

 Local college-high school liaisons

 Forming P-16 initiatives

 Workshop deliverables

Scoring Correction – a little math

 Assume multiple choice test of n questions with

four distractors.

 The student gets m correct, w wrong: m + w = n.

Grade = m - or is it?

 g = number guessed at. w=3/4 g. (g = 4/3 w).

 True score = n – g = n - 4/3w = m - w/3.

 Example n=100. m = 75. True score is

75 – 25/3 ~ 67

Ex. On any such multiple choice test, a grade of 85% is

required to be equivalent to a corrected score of 80%. A

grade of 77% ~ corrected score of 78%.

What sort of placement instruments

do we use?

 High school grades? TAKS raw score.

 High school rank?

 SAT, THEA, Accuplacer, Compass, ACT?

 Internal placement exam?

Is there any consistency?

Accuplacer – an adaptive test

 This means that the computer automatically determines

which questions are presented based on prior

responses.

 This technique selects just the right questions to ask

without being too easy or too difficult.

 The test is not timed.

 After you answer each question, the computer calculates

a score based on all of the answers given and uses this

score to select the next question.

 Questions must be answered in the order given.

Critical transition points

 When do students get turned on to mathematics

(and why)?

 Applications?

 Teacher?

 Career day?

 Love of subject?

 When do students get turned off to mathematics (and

why)?

 Fear or anxiety of subject?

 Teacher?

Placement Exams

 Test for reliability and validity

 Tracking students

 ACCUPLACER is the computer adaptive

testing system approved by the Texas

State Legislature as an alternative

assessment tool for initial THEA testing.

Test equivalencies (for TSI)

Minimum passing standards for WTAMU admission



Test Math

THEA 230

ACCUPLACER 63 elem alg

ASSET 38 elem alg

COMPASS 39 alg

Texas Success Initiative (TSI)

Test equivalencies (for TSI)

Minimum passing standards for Del Mar admission





Test Math

THEA 230

ACCUPLACER 63 elem alg

ASSET 38 elem alg

COMPASS 39 alg



Texas Success Initiative (TSI)

Minimum passing scores for

College Algebra at UH





Test Math

THEA 250

SAT 530

ACT 21


Related docs
Other docs by HC111124122955
Foodstampsandimmigrantsenglish I L A
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
TAKS Questions of the Week Set #1
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
ausstell
Views: 1  |  Downloads: 0
Annual Meeting of the
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Chart 1
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Email Template
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
HTH_algaebloc_granular
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
Download
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
By registering with docstoc.com you agree to our
privacy policy

You are almost ready to download!

You are almost ready to download!