Waipahu High School Early College
Transcription
Waipahu High School Early College
Waipahu High School Early College Early College: Challenge, Not Remediate September 19, 2014 Kauai Chamber of Commerce Presented by: Mark Silliman Director of Waipahu High School Early College Waipahu High School Early College Overview 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Define Early College Early College Mission Early College Goal Brief History of Early College National Longitudinal Data: Measures of Success The Cost of Failure Local Longitudinal Data: Measures of Success Return on Investment Challenge, Not Remediate! Waipahu High School Early College Early College High School History Nationally: Established in 2002 Redesigned 280+ schools Serving more than 80,000 students Established in 32 states and the District of Columbia. Students earn a high school diploma and an Associate’s degree or up to two years of credit toward a Bachelor’s degree—tuition free. Waipahu High School: Established in 2012 Waipahu High School Early College Waipahu HS Early College Mission Increase college and career readiness for: 1. 2. 3. 4. Low-income students First-generation college goers English Language Learners Underrepresented students Tuition free! Waipahu High School Early College A Different Mission Early College Target Population Running Start Target Population Minority Students (under-represented groups) Represented Groups Low-Income Students Students who can afford to pay college tuition Limited English Proficient Students Native speakers who are college ready First-Generation College Goers Parent(s) who generally had some college The Goal: AA Degree at HS Graduation 280 Redesigned Early College School Where are Early Colleges? Academic Support More Likely to Graduate from HS More Likely to Earn College Credit in HS More Likely to Enroll in College After HS More Likely to Persist to Second Year Early College Students Outperform Counterparts in Reading & Math Oregon College or Oregon University Dual Credit Outcomes Dual credit students have a higher college participation rate Continue to the second year at a higher rate Earn a higher first year GPA Accumulate more college credit Predicted to persist to the second year of college are increased by 17% compared to students who did not take dual credit. Office of Institutional Research, Oregon University System (2010) Waipahu High School Early College Early College, Early Success – Sept. 2013 American Institute for Research Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International Impact of Early Colleges on these outcomes for a sample of 10 Early Colleges The overall study sample included 2,458 students and the survey sample included 1,294 students. The study extended through three years past high school. ECS Effective in Helping Target Group 2013 study by American Institutes for Research (AIR) ECS More Positive HS Experience 2013 study by American Institutes for Research (AIR) Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) In math, U.S. 15-year-olds look pretty weak. Among the 34 OECD countries, the United States performed below average in mathematics in 2012 and is ranked 27th The United States ranks 17th in reading, and 20th in science. There has been no significant change in these performances over time. http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/pisa/ President Obama has praised Pathways in Technology Early College High School in Crown Heights as a model for educational reform. U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan Early College Students Waipahu High School students pose for a picture with U.S. Department of Education Secretary Arne Duncan during his visit to the school Monday, March 31, 2014, in Waipahu, Hawaii. Photo by Eugene Tanner National Early College Conference Durham, NC, on Oct. 29-30, 2013 Freeman A. Hrabowski, III President of The University of Maryland, Baltimore County How many of you believe there are significantly more brilliant Chinese and Indian children than American children? Who Pays? A woman’s own formal schooling (a college degree) and the educational attainment of women in her community lower the likelihood that she reports abuse. Breaking the Chain of Poverty Waipahu 2010 Census Profile People QuickFacts Waipahu Hawaii Population, 2010 Population, percent change, 2000 to 2010 Persons under 5 years, percent, 2010 Persons under 18 years, percent, 2010 Persons 65 years and over, percent, 2010 Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander, percent, 2010 (a) Foreign born persons, percent, 2005-2009 Language other than English spoken at home, pct age 5+, 2005-2009 High school graduates, percent of persons age 25+, 2005-2009 Bachelor's degree or higher, pct of persons age 25+, 2005-2009 Persons per household, 2005-2009 Per capita money income in past 12 months (2009 dollars) 2005-2009 People of all ages in poverty - percent, 2005-2009 Total number of firms, 2007 Asian-owned firms, percent, 2007 38,216 15.4% 7.1% 24.8% 15.8% 13.5% 38.4% 50.4% 77.4% 16.0% 4.27 $19,376 13.8% 2,326 80.3% 1,360,301 12.3% 6.4% 22.3% 14.3% 10.0% 16.8% 24.4% 89.5% 29.2% 2.84 $28,662 9.4% 120,374 47.2% Waipahu Crime Report Waipahu Crime Data Relationship of Education to Incarceration Percent of Non-Completers (Drop Outs) School Status and Improvement Report School Year 2012-2013 Estimated Hawaii State Income Revenue Lost If WHS Dropouts Do Not Graduate With Their Class (Lifetime Earning X 8.5%) $2,000,000 $1,800,000 $1,600,000 $1,400,000 $1,200,000 $1,000,000 $800,000 $600,000 $400,000 $200,000 $0 2008 2009 2010 2011 http://swz.salary.com/salarywizard/layouthtmls/swzl_statetaxrate_hi.html Who Pays? • Criminal justice Outcomes – Higher rates of incarceration in jails and prisons – Higher victimization costs – Higher costs of maintaining prisons and jails • Fiscal Outcomes – Lower payments of payroll and federal/state income taxes – Lower property tax payments due to lower home ownership rates and lower value homes – Higher receipt of cash transfer incomes and in-kind transfers (food stamps, rental subsidies, energy assistance, Medicaid) – Large net fiscal burdens on rest of taxpayers Who Pays? • Income outcomes – Higher incidence of income inadequacy problems over the lifetime (poverty, near poverty, low incomes) – Higher dependence on cash public assistance income to support themselves – Higher dependence on in-kind transfers (food stamps, rental housing subsidies, Medicaid) • Family outcomes – Lower marriage rates among men and women – Higher rates of out-of-wedlock childbearing – Poorer nutrition, health, cognitive, schooling outcomes for children of high school dropouts The Mean Annual Taxes Paid by 18-to-64 Year Old Adults (1) in the U.S., Total and by Educational Attainment, 2009-2012 Averages (in Dollars) http://www.caalusa.org/NetFiscalContributions09-12.pdf The Mean Annual Cash/In-Kind Transfers Received and Jail Prison Costs of 18to-64 Year Old Adults in the U.S. and Their Net Annual Fiscal Contributions, Total and by Educational Attainment, 2009-2012 Averages (in Dollars) http://www.caalusa.org/NetFiscalContributions09-12.pdf http://completecollege.org/about-cca/ Associate Degree Graduation Rates are Abysmal 2013 Marketing and Student Recruitment Practices # 2: Academic programs within high schools for students to earn college credits to your institution (Noel-Levitz 2013) Challenge, Not Remediation! Reduce the need for remediation in college The need for remediation among students entering Hawaii’s postsecondary institutions unprepared for postsecondary work cost the state over $14 million during the 2007–08 school year.11 WHS to LCC COMPASS Test Scores 60 COMPASS Placement: Math 50 40 Adult Basic 30 Developmental College Transfer 20 10 0 Fall 2007 Fall 2008 Fall 2009 Fall 2010 Fall 2011 WHS to LCC COMPASS Test Scores 50 COMPASS Placement: Writing 45 40 35 30 Adult Basic 25 Developmental College Transfer 20 15 10 5 0 Fall 2007 Fall 2008 Fall 2009 Fall 2010 Fall 2011 WHS to LCC COMPASS Test Scores 60 COMPASS Placement: Reading 50 40 Adult Basic 30 Developmental College Transfer 20 10 0 Fall 2007 Fall 2008 Fall 2009 Fall 2010 Fall 2011 Fast Tack Program Over the Top: More Time, More Money Two-Year School in Two Years Waipahu High School Early College Established Summer 2012 Waipahu High School Early College Spring 2013 Waipahu High School Early College Spring 2014 Enrollment Data SY2013-2014 STUDENT ENROLLMENT Fall 2013 (Undup. 147) 148 Spring 2014 (Undup. 149) 158 Summer 2014 (Undup. 118) 118 424 DEMOGRAPHICS Males Females 21.5% 78.5% Waipahu High School Early College Waipahu High School Early College Summer 2012 – Psychology 100 Fall 2012 – History 151 – Speech 151 Spring 2013 – English 100 – Sociology 100 – Astronomy 110 – Math 205 Summer 2013 – English 100 – Psychology 100 Fall 2013, Spring & Summer 2014 – Calculus I – Philippines History & Culture 203 – Microbiology 130 – Psychology 100 (2) – English 100 (7) – Sociology 100 (2) – History 151 – Anthropology 152 (2) – Speech 151 (2) – Art 101 – Religion 151 – Freshman Seminar IS 100 (2) – Astronomy 110 Waipahu High School Early College 99.8% Pass Rate 1% 3% 10% Fall ‘13, Spring & Summer '14 Grades Number of “As” 234 Number of “Bs” 123 Number of “Cs” 42 Number of “Ds” 14 Number of “Fs” 5 Number of “Ws” 6 A B C 29% 56% D F Leeward Community College Waipahu High School Early College Waipahu HS Surveys Results - SY2013 Likert Scale: 1= lowest; 5 = highest EC Success Data – all schools Semester School Course Fall 2008 Waipahu SP 151 Mililani Math 205 Kalani ICS 113 CRN Enroll Srate Comp Rate 51275 51383 51984 22 25 21 77.3 88 100 67.9 62.7 88.3 Spring 2009 Campbell SP 151 Kalani DMED 221 52486 53003 7 24 85.7 95.8 67.9 97.6 Fall 2009 Mililani Math 205 54345 30 86.7 64.5 Spring 2010 Campbell SP 151 Sp 151 56132 56134 8 13 75 92.3 69 69 Fall 2010 Miliani Math 205 54345 28 82.1 67.3 Spring 2011 Mililani Math 206 Waipahu SP 151 52110 52872 27 16 85.1 81.25 76.9 70.3 Fall 2011 54290 23 100 77.3 Spring 2012 Waipahu Sp 151 55829 11 100 70.8 Fall 2012 Mililani Math 205 Waipahu SP 151 HIST 151 51238 52390 52423 18 32 10 100 87 90 79.2 67.2 68.1 Spring 2013 Nanakuli ASTR 110 Waipahu ASTR 110 ENG 100 Math 205 SOC 100 Waianae PSY 100 57044 57346 57327 57363 57344 54165 24 12 9 9 32 24 100 100 88.9 100 100 70.8 68.6 68.6 61 79.2 79.3 64 Miliani Math 205 Five years – ten semesters (not summer) 22 Sections 11 Different Classes 8 Different High Schools 425 Students served = Waipahu HS 90.27% Srate for EC Classes 72% Srate for same courses with general student body Waipahu Students – Fall & Spring Early College Classes at Waipahu High School--SRates & GPAs in EC Classes Term Subject CrsNo Fall 2008 Spring 2011 Spring 2012 Fall 2012 Fall 2012 Spring 2013 Spring 2013 Spring 2013 Spring 2013 SP SP SP HIST SP ASTR ENG MATH SOC 151 151 151 151 151 110 100 205 100 Equivalent Classes at Leeward--All Waipahu HS Grads ENR Number of Students Successfully Completing SRATE GPA in the EC Class 22 16 11 10 31 12 9 10 32 17 13 11 9 27 12 8 9 32 77.3 81.3 100.0 90.0 87.1 100.0 88.9 90.0 100.0 2.3 2.0 3.4 2.7 2.8 3.0 3.0 3.3 3.8 Term Subject CrsNo Fall 2008 Spring 2011 Spring 2012 Fall 2012 Fall 2012 Spring 2013 Spring 2013 Spring 2013 Spring 2013 SP SP SP HIST SP ASTR ENG MATH SOC 151 151 151 151 151 110 100 205 100 ENR Number of Students Successfully Completing SRATE GPA in the Class 42 58 52 54 61 7 92 3 28 26 39 39 38 44 4 44 3 23 61.9 67.2 75.0 70.4 72.1 57.1 47.8 100.0 82.1 1.9 1.9 2.2 2.3 2.2 1.6 1.6 2.3 2.5 Retention Rate 90.2 versus 65% 25 percentage point better Retention AVG Srate 90.5 versus 70.4 % 20.1 percentage point difference Srate AVG GPA 2.92 versus 2.05 /4.0 .87 on 4 point scale ( 42% higher) GPA Waipahu Early College students stay in class more and perform better in those classes than their non-Early College peers Waipahu HS EC Match Mainland GPA On Average, Early College Students Earn Higher GPAs at Leeward Community College 4.00 3.50 3.00 2.50 2.00 GPA 1.50 1.00 0.50 0.00 WHS NO Early College WHS Early College Waipahu High School Early College Rigor 41.6% Early College Classes Taught by Ph.D. Instructor Early College students continue excelling in college after graduation Relevance Relationships Dr. Mohan volunteering during the Summer 2014 Study Group Early College High School Initiative Core Principles Committed to Core Principles Committed to serving underrepresented students Sustained by State Dept of Education, IHE and Community ECHS and IHE develop integrated program to enable obtainment of 1 - 2 years of college ECHS support system that develops academic and social skills ECHS, IHE and community advocate for policies that advance EC movement Accelerated Learning Programs Online Learning Academy - EdReady Ed Ready Ed Ready and NROC National Resource for Online Classes http://www.thenrocproject.org/#/ Win - Win Estimated Additional Lifetime Income If High School Dropouts Graduate With Their Class in 2008-20091 States Hawaii Estimated Graduation Rate (2005-06) 63.90% Projected Number of Non-graduates for the Class of 2009 6,202 Total Lifetime Additional Income if Dropouts Graduated $1,612,520,000 Early College: High Yield Return on Investment Return on Investment $133 to $211 more for every $100 invested in Early College Schools than Traditional high schools over the course of 15 years $251 to $395 more over the course of 25 years Augenblick, Palaich and Associates, Inc., “Return on Investment in Early College High Schools,” July 2006 DROPOUTS AND POORLY PREPARED STUDENTS NEGATIVELY AFFECT THE ECONOMY Over 5,700 students did not graduate from Hawaii’s high schools in 2010. Hawaii could save as much as $92.7 million in health care costs over the lifetimes of each class of dropouts. Hawaii’s high schools graduated all of their students, the state could save as much as $13.7 million a year. Hawaii’s economy could see a combination of crimerelated savings and additional revenue of about $18 million each year if the male high school graduation rate increased by just 5 percent.4 Waipahu High School Early College Challenge, Not Remediate! Mahalo Nui Loa http://www.edline.net/pages/Waipahu_High_School/Community/Waipahu_High_School_Early_Coll