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Published byGladys Casey Modified over 9 years ago
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Barbara Baran Senior Fellow California Budget Project
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Growing importance of basic skills education in California. Growing agreement on what’s broken and what works. Significant decline in resources.
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Challenge and Opportunity High stakes Serious danger Real opportunity
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Who is the California Budget Project? Why look at California’s basic skills system? What is the At a Crossroads series?
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Two institutions share primary responsibility: Adult Education and CCCs, credit and noncredit. Together, they served roughly 1.5 million students a year. Adult Education served 63% of all basic skills students. About half CCC basic skills students are in the credit division and about half in noncredit.
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Most basic skill students are ESL students: 65% of AEP students vs. 40% of CCC basic skills students. 60% Latino; 17% Asian; 14% white. Almost 60% of CCC basic skills students are 25 or younger vs. 30 percent of Adult Education students who are 24 or younger.
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Some basic skills students make significant progress but most make minimal progress over several years; many make no progress. Few students move from Adult Education or noncredit CCC courses to credit academic and vocational courses. In the CCCs, basic skills students significantly less likely to achieve degree, certificate, or transfer.
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Outcomes Many students become discouraged and drop out.
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No clear state priorities for its overall investment in basic skills education. Little integration or coordination among basic skills programs both across and within institutions. Insufficient funding. No comprehensive data system to effectively guide administrators and policymakers.
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Assessment and placement policies inconsistent across programs/institutions and often insufficiently diagnostic. Many programs fail to employ the most effective program design and instructional approaches. Few students get the range of supportive services they need to succeed. Limited professional development opportunities for faculty.
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Many innovative efforts underway. Adult Education new strategic plan incorporates many key principles. One example: Minnesota FastTRAC Adult education provided leadership. Links adult education and community college credit division. Integrated instruction. Serves students as low as 6 th grade level without high school or GED. Links to One Stops.
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Commitment Integration Acceleration Accountability
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California should view its Adult Education Program and community college programs as components of a common effort and set goals for the system as a whole. California’s basic skills system should transition increasing numbers of individuals into postsecondary education or jobs with opportunities for advancement, and increase the share of basic skills students who complete a certificate, degree, or transfer to a four-year college or university.
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California should reconfigure the use of existing resources to support these goals and invest in models that bring together multiple funding streams. Dedicated state funding for basic skills education in both the Adult Education Program and CCC should be restored and linked to these goals.
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California should elevate the importance of basic skills and mandate that the CCCs and Adult Education Program begin to integrate their programs through well-coordinated local and regional networks. California should pilot the development of “gateway” centers that are partnerships among the Adult Education Program, CCCs, and other stakeholders.
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ASSESSMENT AND PLACEMENT Basic skill students should receive assessment on entry at any point in the system and a tailored educational plan. The Adult Education Program and CCCs should better align their assessment instruments. INSTRUCTIONAL PRACTICES Both the CCCs and Adult Education Program should implement instructional practices that are student- centered, provide peer support, accelerate the learning process, and contextualize basic skills instruction.
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STUDENT SUPPORT California should develop financial aid policies that better target and support underprepared students. California should expand supportive services for underprepared students. PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT The Adult Education Program and CCC should partner to provide basic skills instructions regular opportunities and incentives for professional development.
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California needs to implement an accountability framework for all basic skills programs and develop a comprehensive, integrated data system.
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Serious barriers to reform but serious need also. We know what works Integrated institutions and programs; Policies and pedagogies that support and accelerate student progress; and Committed state policymakers.
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Critical step is overcoming institutional and political inertia.
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