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Featured stories from this issue: Cover Story: Career programs under construction Program
lets students take college courses and earn credit Umoja
blends counseling, academics, real-world experience What
are the jobs of the future? Boston
pioneers school partnership
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Career Education Following a setback
last year, a small but successful Chicago Public Schools program that
allows high school juniors and seniors to earn college credit for career
and technical courses is regaining strength. Called College Excel,
the program gives students a taste of college course work, for which they
earn dual high school and college credits that generally transfer to any
institution. It was designed in part to motivate average students to stay
in school. Last year, student
participation dropped by 1,200 to 1,836 students from the previous year
because of funding problems. CPS planned to use federal funds appropriated
under the Carl D. Perkins Vocational-Technical Education Act to pay for
students college tuition. But the Illinois State Board of Education,
the fiscal agent for the Perkins funds, ruled that out, saying the money
is meant to help students succeed in high school. District administrators
subsequently found $1 million for the $2 million program. Some local private
colleges also stepped up to cover some tuition costs. Robert Morris College
paid the second-semester costs for 406 students. Obviously we are
not going to be able to do that forever, says Candace Goodwin, senior
vice president for enrollment. DeVry University also funded about 14 continuing
students through second semester. But City Colleges
of Chicago, where nearly 37 percent of Excel students were enrolled in
2002, could not underwrite the program for students enrolled. Since CPS was unable
to fund the program at previous levels, it raised the entrance requirement
from a 2.0 to 3.0 grade point average, thus disqualifying average students.
When new Education-to-Careers
Chief Jill Wine-Banks arrived at CPS last April, high school education-to-careers
coordinators were quick to take up Excels cause. The message got
through. Despite the tight CPS budget, College Excel got $1.8 million
this year. As a result, the admissions bar will be lowered to a 2.5 grade point average for students joining the program in the second semester this school year. That was a very
good move, says Steve Haywood, who recruits College Excel students
for Olive-Harvey College. It affords an opportunity to a larger
pool of students. Positive
results Although College Excel reaches only about 5 percent of CPS high school students, it has produced positive results. Last year, 65 percent of Excel students passed their college courses with grades of A or B. DeVry and Robert Morris
College report that they are more likely to stay in college and graduate
than CPS students who did not participate in the program. Dual-enrollment programs
like College Excel have sparked national interest because they can save
students time and money toward a college degree, expand access to technical
training and ease the difficult transition from high school to college.
The idea is catching like wildfire, says Richard Kazis, senior
vice president of Jobs for the Future, a Boston-based nonprofit that promotes
youth workforce development. According to the U.S. Department of Education,
38 states have adopted policies supporting dual enrollment. Preliminary research,
while limited, suggests that these programs help students succeed in college.
A 2001 study by the University of Arizona found that the grade point averages
of dual enrollment participants entering the university dropped less than
those of other entering students. Another study by the Center for an Urban
Future, a New York City-based public policy group, found entering freshmen
at the City University of New York who had participated in the public
schools dual enrollment program were more likely than other students
to graduate from college on time and less likely to need remedial coursework.
Colleges
get involved College Excel was
born in 1997 under the Paul Vallas administration, which favored outsourcing
career and technical education to businesses, colleges and other job-training
institutions. The program began with three colleges that worked with 360
students from 20 high schools. Last year, 1,836 juniors
and seniors from 60 high schools participated in College Excel at 10 area
colleges and universities. (The current year enrollment hasnt been
finalized, but figures comparable to last year are expected at 11 colleges.)
Students who meet the attendance and grade standards or have a school
recommendation and pass the colleges placement exam have access
to a range of career and technical courses, including accounting, business
administration, electronics, drafting or computer information systems. When College Excel
started, students could take multiple courses, but funding restrictions
have limited the number to one per semester. If they start as juniors,
they can take four college courses by the time they graduate. Thats
a big savings, notes Romelia Mercado, manager of high school partnerships
for DeVry. Grouping
students The structure of College
Excel varies, but the most successful efforts share some common elements:
They steer students into a coherent sequence of courses and create classes
where groups of high school students learn from college instructors, says
Davis Jenkins, a senior fellow who researches workforce development at
the University of Illinois at Chicagos Great Cities Institute. DeVry,
Robert Morris and Daley College use this approach, he says. Both DeVry and Robert
Morris decided to separate high school students from regular college students
for practical reasonsthey allow the schools to align their Excel
courses with the CPS calendar. In addition, both colleges also use semester
breaks (when professors are not teaching) to offer Excel students workshops
in time management and college and career preparation. For example, at
DeVry, students pretend to be college recruiters and examine prospective
students applications to gain greater insight into how college admissions
offices make decisions. Learning college material
from college professors provides students with an ideal bridge from high
school to college, says Angela Jordan, vice president of student affairs
at Robert Morris. Its the best of both worlds, she says.
Theyre still being taught the same curriculum, but theyre
with other high school students. Excel students at
Robert Morris start in their junior year and take a two-year sequence
of courses in accounting and business administration, computer networking
or medical assisting. College administrators
insist the curriculum is not watered down to a high school level. But
students need to feel comfortable with an instructor, so colleges strive
to choose faculty who wont intimidate high school students, says
DeVrys Mercado. The Daley College
high school group grew from a partnership between Gage Park High and the
Associated Equipment Distributors Foundation, the training offshoot of
the professional association for businesses that distribute construction
equipment. In 1998, Gage Park created a school-within-a-school for students
who wanted to combine challenging academics with technical training. These
students attend courses at Daley through Excel, as well as on weekends
and in the summer. Since 2000, when the first group graduated, the small
schools graduation rate has consistently topped 80 percent, while
Gage Parks overall rate ranges from 63 percent to 69 percent. We found the
whole group [of students] moving together has a tremendous effect on each
other. They are pals together, they do homework together, says Prem
Sud, executive director of the Manufacturing Technology Institute at Daley
College. John Rivera, a June
graduate of Foreman High, says College Excel gave him a leg up. Credits
from two computer engineering classes he took at DeVry while in high school
were accepted at DeVry, where hes now enrolled. Rivera says the
As and Bs he received in his Excel classes helped him gain admission and
win a scholarship to the university. A lot of people in their first year of college decide its not for them, says Rivera, who appreciated Excels early introduction to college coursework. But the experience of DeVry made me want to go even more.
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Click on the thumbnail for a full-size image. Click here to read this story in Spanish |
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