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elleng

(130,933 posts)
Sun May 1, 2016, 03:50 PM May 2016

What Can Stop Kids From Dropping Out

Last edited Sun May 1, 2016, 04:55 PM - Edit history (1)

'HILLARY CLINTON and Bernie Sanders have both trumpeted their proposals to expand college access and reduce student debt, but an even bigger problem is going ignored, at least by politicians: college dropouts.

The statistics are jaw-dropping. Only 53 percent of college freshmen earn a bachelor’s degree within six years. Even fewer community-college students — 39 percent — obtain a credential from a two- or four-year institution within six years. Of the 31 million adults who attended college between 1994 and 2014, about four million spent at least two years there and never earned a degree.

An American Institute for Research study from 2011 estimates the cost of dropping out, measured in lost earnings and taxes, at $4.5 billion. If any company had as much trouble hanging on to its customers, it would go out of business.

The scandal — and it really is a scandal — is that many colleges and universities aren’t using tools that have been proved to substantially raise graduation rates. Instead, they duck the issue by pointing a finger at high schools for turning out underprepared students.

But while high schools could doubtlessly improve, this excuse won’t wash. As Kati Haycock, the chief executive of the Education Trust, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit, pointed out, “among otherwise similar institutions, graduation rates can vary by as many as 20 percentage points, and graduation rates for Latino or black students by even more.”

To cite one comparison, North Carolina State and Auburn enroll similar students, but the two universities have significantly different track records for the years 2003 through 2013. N.C. State raised minority students’ graduation rates by 12 percentage points during that time, nearly halving the gap between them and white students, while graduation rates for underrepresented students at Auburn actually declined and the gap grew to more than 20 percentage points.

It doesn’t require a genius to change the story line. Universities must give students personalized attention and useful academic feedback, leveraging technology to support them at scale. That’s Ivy League-style ministration, adapted for mass higher education. And it won’t break the bank. . .

In pinpointing roadblocks, the university also looked beyond academics. About a thousand Georgia State undergraduates were dropping out every semester because they couldn’t pay the tuition. When a closer look revealed that many were short just a few hundred dollars, the university started awarding small just-in-time grants and financial counseling. Last year, some 400 students who otherwise would have dropped out were able to receive their degrees.

Shaniece Alexanderia Withrow found her schoolwork suffering after she gave birth to her son during her junior year. But she finished on time. “The retention grant allowed me to complete the last course that I needed to acquire to fulfill my degree requirement,” she said.

“Those grants aren’t just financial lifesavers,” said Mr. Renick. “They also change attitudes. For students who never thought anyone was watching out for them, it has meant a lot for the university to say, ‘We want you to graduate.’ ”'>>>

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/01/opinion/sunday/what-can-stop-kids-from-dropping-out.html?

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What Can Stop Kids From Dropping Out (Original Post) elleng May 2016 OP
First, allow a general HS diploma at 16 Warpy May 2016 #1
They have something like that here Travis_0004 May 2016 #2
Yes, they have those programs here and there Warpy May 2016 #3

Warpy

(111,267 posts)
1. First, allow a general HS diploma at 16
Sun May 1, 2016, 04:34 PM
May 2016

to be followed by a 2 year trade school program. That will do more than trying to keep kids nailed to a seat in academics they have no talent nor inclination for. Stop stigmatizing kids who quit at 16. They do this in Europe and it works a hell of a lot better than what we've been trying to do.

The academic diploma would take 2 years longer and be aimed at college prep.

Subsidized or even free university won't work for all kids. Some are headed for trades and they know it.

 

Travis_0004

(5,417 posts)
2. They have something like that here
Sun May 1, 2016, 04:47 PM
May 2016

Beginning sophomore year a student can enroll in the career center, where they can learn welding, culinary, IT, police, fire, ems, or lots of other trades. Anybody who enrolls in that still gets english, math and all the other classes, but they also spend a bit of their day learning a trade.

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