1 / 12

Dropouts and our society

Dropouts and our society. KKnox 2010. Everyday…. Over 7,000 students drop out Meaning about 1.2 million students won’t graduate with their peers. last census:. HS dropout $ 17,299 average income HS diploma $ 29,633 Associate’s $ 36,345 Bachelor’s $ 52,571

kiaria
Download Presentation

Dropouts and our society

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. Dropouts and our society KKnox2010

  2. Everyday… • Over 7,000 students drop out • Meaning about 1.2 million students won’t graduate with their peers

  3. last census: • HS dropout $17,299 average income • HS diploma $29,633 • Associate’s $36,345 • Bachelor’s $52,571 • each dropout costs the nation approx. $260,000 over a lifetime

  4. In 2007 • 329 billion loss to country • Only about 58 percent of Hispanic students • and 53 percent of black students will graduate on time with a regular diploma, • compared to 80 percent of Asian students and 76 percent of white students (EPE, 2007)

  5. Our graduation rate • COVA: 42% approx ? (entering 9th through 12th) • State 73.9% • Greeley-Evans School District 6: 70% • Jefferson County Schools: 81.3% • Denver Public Schools: up 4.1 percent • Mesa County Valley School District 51 up 3.3 percent, and Colorado Springs School District 11 up 3.2 percent. • Graduation gap statewide: 57.8% Hispanics; females over male

  6. Did you know • Prisons are built on 4th grade dropout data?

  7. What they think…why do youth drop out? • In a survey of high school dropouts, respondents indicated that they felt alienated at school and that no one even noticed if they failed to show up for class. • High school dropouts also complained that school did not reflect real-world challenges. • More than half of respondents said that the major reason for dropping out of high school was that they felt their classes were uninteresting and irrelevant (Bridgeland & diIulio, 2006).

  8. It’s not because they CAN’T

  9. Highly influence student’s possibilities for success. (Clark 1988; Color 1989; Fenstermacher 1986; Nespor 1987; Pintrich 1990; Weinstein 1989; Wilson 1990; Kouzes and Posner 1999) The core belief set is defined as the intersection of one’s purpose, values and intention. Reflect back on the philosophy discussions we had and our background experiences. Belief systems of teachers

  10. Table Talk, 5 minutes • How do my defined values and key purpose in life overlap with what I am doing here in my current role? • What is my intention here? • Is there anywhere my values and philosophy appear to be in conflict with some area of the job? If so, how can I get into alignment so I can be happy and build a legacy with others?

  11. Johns’ Hopkins data: drop out predictors • 8th graders attending < 80% of time • 9th graders attending < 70% of time • Failing a math or LA class in 8th • 9th < 2 credits • Not promoted to 10th • Agency-involved students • K-5 accelerated path • 6th attention groups needed • Teacher philosophy aligned with mission; Portrait of a Graduate

  12. What can we do? DISCUSSION-- tables with debrief • In spite of our circumstance

More Related