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FINDINGS FROM THE 2006-7 INTEGRATED SURVEY

FINDINGS FROM THE 2006-7 INTEGRATED SURVEY. December 3, 2007. College-level Work in High School. Hypothesis: A“dose” of college credit in high school with supports will ensure that a wider range of students understand the demands of college and decide “I can do it.”

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FINDINGS FROM THE 2006-7 INTEGRATED SURVEY

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  1. FINDINGS FROM THE 2006-7 INTEGRATED SURVEY December 3, 2007

  2. College-level Work in High School • Hypothesis:A“dose” of college credit in high school with supports will ensure that a wider range of students understand the demands of college and decide “I can do it.” • Theory of Change: By integrating grades 9-14, compressing the years to a credential, and removing some financial barriers to college, the state will increase the number of young people attaining the AA degree and the opportunity to earn the BA.

  3. Advantages of College-level Work in High School • Time to degree shortened • Families and (potentially) the state save money • Students get to try out college--best programs include time on a college campus • Students are motivated to work hard to earn free college credit • Learning is measured in multiple ways (except AP) Early data confirms that students respond to challenge more readily than to remediation

  4. What AreEarly College High Schools? • Early college high schools are: • Small schools encompassing grades 6,7-14 or 9-14 created through formal partnerships between secondary and postsecondary institutions. • Designed so students underrepresented in postsecondary can earn an Associate’s degree or two years of college credit while still in high school 6-12 schools= 7 years to AA (-2 years) 9-12 schools= 4-5 years to AA (-1or 2 years)

  5. 2006-2007 Survey Overview • Administered to 130 Early College High Schools • 121 schools responded (93%)

  6. Early College H.S. Overview (2006-7 School Year) • Enrollment: 20,196 students enrolled in 121 schools in survey. • Demographics: 35% Hispanic, 28.5% White, 26.3% Black, 5.2% Asian, 3% Native American, 2% Mixed. • Graduation: 2,216 ECHS students graduated from 38 schools. • What They’re Studying: 35 school have a STEM focus; 110 schools report that students are enrolled in college courses.

  7. School Designs STEM: 35 Schools Teacher Prep: 8 Schools Business: 9 Schools Native American: 8 Schools Vocational: 13 Schools Internships: 39 Schools Community Service: 72 Schools Formal Tutoring Programs: 99 Schools After School Programs: 49 Schools Individual Learning Plans: 61 Schools School-Wide Literacy Plans: 60 Schools AVID: 18 Schools Distance Learning: 17 Schools

  8. % of Students Compared to All Students in the Grade Who Take College Courses for Credit GRADE # of schools where # of schools where more than 50% of grade 100% of grade take take college coursescollege courses 9th Grade 39 36 10th Grade 28 18 11th Grade 32 14 12th Grade 26 12 13th Grade 6 6

  9. Where Do Students Take the Majority of Their College Classes? Where? # of Schools Reporting Online 2 Office Building 1 HS and 2-Year College 1 School Building 23 4-Year College 14 2-Year College 63

  10. Composition of College Classes WHAT IS THE COMPOSITION OF MOST OF THE COLLEGE CLASSES TAKEN BY YOUR STUDENTS? CLASS COMPOSITION # OF SCHOOLS Only EC Students59 Cohort Take College Classes 47 Together, Receive Support Together Individual Students Attend College 54 Classes With Other College Students

  11. % of Students by Grade 2006-7 School Year (121 Schools)

  12. How the Grades Break Down • 6th Grade: 683 • 7th Grade: 510 • 8th Grade: 316 • 9th Grade: 7,348 • 10th Grade: 4,556 • 11th Grade: 3,765 • 12th Grade: 2,095 • 13th Grade: 77 • Ungraded: 656 Total of 20,006 Students Reported

  13. % of ECHS Students by Grade level for 2006-7 (121 Respondents)

  14. % of Males/Females in ECHS 2006-07 (121 School Respondents)

  15. Race of Students in 121 Early College High Schools (2006-7)

  16. Title 1 Schools 2006-2007(49 Respondents) • 46 early college high schools reported being Title 1 schools • These schools represent more than a third of all Early College High Schools

  17. Number Of ECHS Students: LEP, IEP, FRL 2006-7* (92 School Respondents) *Total School Enrollment Reported in Survey: 20,006

  18. # of ECHS Students Applied, Accepted and Enrolled, 2006-2007 (36 Schools) 56% of Applied Accepted 96% of Accepted Enrolled

  19. # of Students Who Took State Reading Assessment: 2005-6

  20. # of Students Who Passed State Reading Assessment: 2005-6

  21. Comparison: # of Taking State Reading Assessment VS # Passed or Better Grade Took Exam Passed or Better 9 (24 Schools) 2396 1905 (80%) 10 (30 Schools) 2926 2130 (73%) 11 (16 Schools) 1435 1133 (80%) 12 (1 School) 93 93 (100%)

  22. Grade Progression: 9th to 10th • 4,154 students enrolled as 9th graders in Oct. 2005 • One year later, 3,678 of these students were enrolled in 10th grade (88%) • 498 transferred to another school (12%)

  23. Grade Progression: 10th to 11th • 3,472 students enrolled as 10th graders in Oct. 2005 • One year later, 3,237 of these students were enrolled in 11th grade (93%)

  24. Grade Progression: 11th to 12th • 2,411 students enrolled as 11th graders in Oct. 2005 • One year later, 1,957 of these students were enrolled in 11th grade (81%) • 262 transferred to another school (11%) • 103 repeated the 11th grade (4%)

  25. Grade Progression: 12th on • 1,733 students enrolled as 12th graders in Oct. 2005 • One year later, 1,170 of these students had graduated (67.5%) • 262 transferred to another school (15%) • 72 repeated the 12th grade (4%) • 226 stayed for a 13th year (13%)

  26. 2006 Graduates • Total of 2,115 graduates, including conversion schools • 846 accepted into 2-year colleges • 812 accepted into 4-year colleges • 91 accepted into technical/certification programs • Of 115 students starting at the first three early colleges • four years ago, over 95 percent graduated with a high school diploma, over 57 percent earned an Associate¹s degree, and over 80 percent were accepted at a four-year college (Based on June 2006 data collection)

  27. Most Cited Forms of Student Support • 98 schools reported having a formal tutoring program (83% of responding schools) • 33 schools reported having an extended day program • 60 schools reported having individualized learning plans for each student • 59 schools reported having a school-wide literacy plan • 18 schools reporting having an AVID program

  28. Questions and Issues • How successful are early college high schools in serving students with significant educational deficits • Is there an “ideal” early college student? • Is the rate of student transfers out of early college more a product of new schools getting off the ground and will transfers decline over time? What are implications for student support?

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