Closing
the Achievement Gap
The Adelman Report
A recent report, “Answers
in the Tool Box: Academic Intensity, Attendance Patterns, and
Bachelor’s Degree Attainment,” by Clifford Adelman, Senior
Research Analyst for the U.S. Department of Education (June 1999),
came to the following conclusions:
- The academic
intensity and quality of one’s high school curriculum is
a huge factor in determining bachelor’s degree completion.
- Academic variables
are much more potent predictors of college completion than social
background variables.
- Rigorous academic
course work can mitigate the influence of socioeconomic status
on students’ lives.
Students must have
the opportunity-to-learn at high levels no matter who they are or
where they come from. Students who enter higher education from
schools that do not provide an opportunity-to-learn at high levels
enter with less momentum toward degrees than others. Poor and
working-class students from rural areas and minority students are
disproportionately affected by this lack of opportunity-to-learn.
The intensity and
quality of curriculum is a cumulative investment of years of effort
by schools, teachers, and students, and provides momentum into higher
education and beyond. It obviously pays off. It is the
best predictor of college completion.
Of course, not
all students want to attend college, but most jobs in the future
will require some post-high school education. A booklet published
by The College Board, Dispelling the Culture of Mediocrity, says, “The
college degree has replaced the high school diploma as the pass to
economic advancement. Between 1989 and 1997, for example, the
wage difference between college-educated and non-college educated
men has widened 12 percent.”
Adelman suggested
that one way to increase the academic intensity of the high school
curriculum is to increase the number of students taking Advanced
Placement (AP) classes. These courses allow students to receive dual
credit in high school and college if they receive a high enough score
on the national exam. His research found that high school seniors
who took only one AP class nearly doubled the likelihood of graduation
from college (59% compared to 33% of those who did not take an AP
class). Students who took two or more AP Courses raised the
likelihood to 76%. This figure is well above the average college
graduation rate of 63%.
According to Terry
Peterson, counselor and chief advisor to former U.S. Secretary of
Education Richard W. Riley, “Advanced Placement courses are
forceful gate-openers for poor and minority students. (These
courses) can help level the playing field and increase the odds that
students from diverse social backgrounds and ethnic groups attend
college.”
Adelman found that “the
impact of a high school curriculum of high academic intensity and
quality on degree completion is far more pronounced and positive
for African-American and Latino students than any other pre-college
indicator of academic resources.” In fact, it is much greater
for them than it is for white students. He also found that, “of
all pre-college curricula, the highest level of mathematics one studies
in secondary school has the strongest continuing influence on bachelor’s
degree completion. Finishing a course in trigonometry or pre-calculus
more than doubles the odds that a student who enters post-secondary
education will complete a bachelors degree.”
This research is
exciting in light of the fact that, even though we cannot control
a student’s socioeconomic circumstances, we can control the
curriculum. Plans are underway to implement a program
called Vertical Teaming which will prepare students for more rigorous
courses while supporting teachers as they raise standards.
Questions? Contact Terri
Bawden (bawden.t@mail.wsd.wednet.edu) |