Inside - white paper series
Summer 2011
 
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MAKING THE GRADE

By Greg Hood
Coordinator, School Counseling Services and College Success Programs
FCPS Instructional Services Department

When it comes to helping our students succeed in the most rigorous courses available, a number of our schools have developed strategies to recruit and retain students into advanced academic courses.

Some of these strategies include:

1. Using the results of the PSAT scores and AP Potential to identify students who have the potential to be successful in advanced academic courses

2. Preview sessions during the school day to help students gain a better understanding of advanced academic course expectations as they select courses for the following school year

3. Programs to educate parents and guardians about advanced academic course offerings and how to support their students in taking those courses

4. Summer jump-start or “boot camp” programs for students new to advanced academic courses focused on building academic skills

5. Support programs during the school day including structured study time, mentoring, and embedded remediation

Even though many FCPS students seek out and complete advanced academic courses, many students do not.

Frequently, these are the students who are also underrepresented in the college-going population.

Schools continue to encourage students to take advantage of advanced academic course offerings, but it remains critical for FCPS to continue to provide academic rigor in standard courses to ensure college and career readiness for all students.

School-based administrators can support academic rigor in all courses by ensuring all courses:

1. Teach analytical thinking, learning, comprehension, and writing skills

2. Encompass content and the development of cognitive abilities and key learning skills

3. Include inquiry-based learning and development of students’ critical reading, writing, analytical, thinking, and reasoning abilities

4. Provide instruction to the same high standard across all courses

5. Connect assignments and assessments, and ensure that all students understand the key skills required for post-secondary success across a range of subjects.

About Greg Hood: Greg Hood is currently the Coordinator for School Counseling and the College Success Program for Fairfax County Public Schools. Prior to his current position, Greg has served as an Assistant Principal, Director of Student Services, Instructional Employment Specialist, Test Administration Specialist, School Counselor and teacher. Greg has worked at Longfellow, Irving, and Key Middle School. Greg received an undergraduate degree form University of Batimore, a Master’s Degree from Johns Hopkins University, and administrative endorsement through Lead Fairfax in collaboration with George Mason University. Contact Greg at: gshood@fcps.edu.

For additional recommendations, read Academic Rigor: At the Heart of College Success.

Academic Rigor: Preparing Students to Be College and Career Ready

By Marcy Miller
Secondary School Counseling Specialist, grades 7-12
FCPS School Counseling Services Department

While educational pundits have long discussed the academic and navigational skills that students need to be college ready, a growing body of research shows that students, regardless of their post-secondary goals, will need additional training and education to secure employment in the present and future workforce.

In fact, a 2005 study by ACT, entitled, Courses Count: Preparing Students for Postsecondary Success, indicates that 80 percent of today’s fastest-growing jobs will require some post-secondary education. Further, a 2010 study by Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce estimates that 62 percent of jobs in 2018 will require at least some college education.

It has become increasingly obvious that students need the same preparation to be college- or career-ready to be well-equipped for life after high school.

Consider the Evidence: In FCPS, we are focused on helping every student achieve success in college and in their careers. The question is, how are we going to accomplish this mission? We believe a good place to start begins with the recommendation from the 2004 report by the Pathways to College Network, A Shared Agenda: A Leadership Challenge to Improve College Access and Success.

Their recommendations include:

1. Improve access to and engagement in academic and personal counseling, college and career planning, and academic support

2. Provide ongoing assessment of progress and feedback for teachers, students, and parents using measurable outcomes of students’ academic progress.

3. Align academic instruction with skills required for success in first-year college courses without remediation

4. Integrate academic support with teaching and learning (including tutoring, supplemental instruction, learning communities, tailored developmental instruction, and study skills instruction)

School counselors can work closely with students and families to provide academic advisement and support the development of a plan to help students meet their post-secondary goals. Students should begin with the end in mind and understand how academic choices today affect their goals of tomorrow.

The Importance of Academic Rigor in College Admissions

Strength of the high school schedule is consistently ranked as the most important factor in college-admissions decisions. In addition to considering the coursework a student has completed in high school, colleges also use entrance exams scores to make admissions decisions.

A recent College Board study showed that students in the class of 2010 who completed a core curriculum (four or more years of English, three or more years of mathematics, three or more years of natural science, and three or more years of social science and history) scored, on average, 151 points higher on the SAT than those who did not complete a core curriculum.

The College Board study also showed that in addition to completing core courses, students who completed AP coursework consistently scored well above the mean SAT score. Similar research studies have been conducted that examine the impact of International Baccalaureate (IB) coursework. A 2009 study conducted by David Conley on behalf of the Educational Policy Improvement Center concluded that students who learn the IB curriculum in high school gain the skills and knowledge to be academically successful in entry-level college courses.

The Bottom Line: Students who are encouraged to pursue rigor, and who push themselves just a little harder, achieve greater academic success. We believe that if we focus and strategize, just as we ask of our students, we can make all our students more successful.

About Marcy Miller: A secondary school counseling specialist with Fairfax County Public Schools, she previously served as the Director of Student Services at Fairfax High School, and as a school counselor at South County Secondary School and Westfield High School. Miller began her career in education with the Head Start program and has worked with students in every grade from Pre-K to 12. She is a graduate of James Madison University, holds an M.Ed. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and earned her administrative endorsement through Lead Fairfax in collaboration with the University of Virginia. Contact her at: mgmiller@fcps.edu.

Next: Is the Rigor of U.S. College and Career Readiness Standards Internationally Competitive?

Prev: Building Rigor Into Every Classroom

inside is an online publication published by the Fairfax County Public Schools Instructional Services Department. Its mission is to share thoughts and ideas about curriculum and assessment that are fundamental to the good work FCPS principals and teachers are doing with students.

Questions and comments are welcome and should be directed to Peter Noonan: peter.noonan@fcps.edu / 571-423-4510.