From the summary of the study, published in the Spring 2009 issue of The Future of Children
"Melissa
Roderick, Jenny Nagaoka, and Vanessa Coca focus on the importance of improving college
access and readiness for low-income and minority students in urban high
schools. They stress the aspirations-attainment gap: although the college
aspirations of all U.S. high school students, regardless of race, ethnicity,
and family income, have increased dramatically over the past several decades,
significant disparities remain in college readiness and enrollment.
"The
authors emphasize the need for researchers and policy makers to be explicit
about precisely which sets of knowledge and skills shape college access and
performance and about how best to measure those skills. They identify four
essential sets of skills: content knowledge and basic skills; core academic
skills; non-cognitive, or behavioral, skills; and "college
knowledge," the ability to effectively search for and apply to college.
High schools, they say, must stress all four.
"The
authors also examine different ways of assessing college readiness. The three
most commonly recognized indicators used by colleges, they say, are coursework
required for college admission, achievement test scores, and grade point
averages. Student performance on all of these indicators of readiness reveals
significant racial and ethnic disparities.
"To
turn college aspirations into college attainment, high schools and teachers
need clear indicators of college readiness and clear performance standards for
those indicators. These standards, say the authors, must be set at the
performance level necessary for high school students to have a high probability
of gaining access to four-year colleges. The standards must allow schools and districts
to assess where their students currently stand and to measure their progress.
The standards must also give clear guidance about what students need to do to
improve."
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