High school students are more likely to choose honors and other advanced courses in their junior or senior years, but for some students, that might be too late.
To ramp up the number of students鈥攑articularly Black and Hispanic students鈥攚ho graduate ready for higher education, schools need to rethink their class prerequisites and provide better access, guidance, and supports to help students prioritize their course progression, according to an ongoing research project in Delaware. It was part of new college-readiness research highlighted on the first day of the American Educational Research Association鈥檚 annual conference here. The four-day meeting is expected to draw about 14,000 researchers from around the world and will be followed by a two-day virtual summit in May.
In three studies in the project, University of Delaware researchers analyzed school course catalogues, conducted staff interviews, and reviewed transcripts from about 100,000 students who graduated from Delaware charter and district high schools in 2020 and 2021, to track patterns in how schools offer advanced courses and the supports they give students to choose them.
Researchers found the majority of high schools studied restrict advanced classes鈥攊ncluding honors, Advanced Placement, dual-enrollment, and International Baccalaureate courses鈥攅ither through minimum test score requirements or prerequisite classes. In particular, high-poverty schools were significantly more likely than wealthier schools to have highly restricted access to advanced courses. None of the Title I schools in the study offered unrestricted access to advanced coursework, while eight schools with lower levels of poverty among students have unrestricted access to advanced classes.
69传媒 of color in the state were significantly less likely to take advanced courses at any point in high school. For example, while just over half of all students studied took no advanced math classes in high school, that figure was nearly two-thirds for Black students.
More than 70 percent of the students took general, college-preparatory math classes in their first year of high school, and 27 percent took honors or accelerated math in 9th grade, according to Henry May, the director of the Center for Research in Education and Social Policy and an associate education professor at the University of Delaware, who discussed the transcript study. (Three percent of students took their first high school math course in middle school). The vast majority of students who started honors math in 9th grade continued to take advanced coursework throughout high school, but those who started with standard college-preparatory classes were less likely to go on to take multiple advanced classes in upper grades.
Some course offerings intended to broaden students鈥 access ended up limiting them instead. For example, students who participated in electives such as yearbook, creative writing, and vocational math in early high school were less likely to take more challenging courses later on, said Zoey (Chu Yi) Lu, a postdoctoral associate at the Center for Research in Education and Social Policy at the University of Delaware, who presented the school course offerings study.
鈥淗aving a wide range of courses [offered in school] may appear to be strong,鈥 Lu said, 鈥渂ut in reality, these courses can end up 鈥榚asy ways out鈥 for a high school student.鈥
Although creative writing or yearbook electives may fall under language arts, for example, they often don鈥檛 meet prerequisites that students need for later advanced courses鈥攁nd students may not realize this until it鈥檚 too late.
鈥淏y senior year, the honors-level students have more course choices,鈥 Lu said.
School approaches to help students challenge themselves
Small school changes can help students make better choices about their classes. In a related study, Katrina Morrison, a policy scientist and research associate for CRESP at the University of Delaware and her colleagues interviewed principals, assistant principals, and counselors at 13 charter and district high schools about how students got access to and support for taking challenging courses.
Morrison and her colleagues found three ways schools could expand the number and variety of students choosing challenging courses:
- Help students see challenging courses both as a tool to open up options in high school and to prepare for college.
- Boost confidence among students who are taking advanced courses.
- Provide social and academic supports for students taking advanced courses.
Simple encouragement proved one of the most common supports students needed. Staff reported students are often intimidated by additional homework and consider academic struggle a sign that they 鈥渄on鈥檛 fit鈥 in an honors class. Two of the schools even allow students a six-week trial period in which they can transfer from an honors to a general class if they鈥檙e struggling academically, which administrators said led more students to take the chance to challenge themselves with the more difficult courses.
The principal at one special-admissions high school told researchers that teachers have flexibility to recommend students for an honors class even if they do not meet the academic bar on a prerequisite class.
鈥淚鈥檓 sure they recommend students [who] have a C, because there could be a student that works really hard, that just doesn鈥檛 take great exams. But they鈥檙e going to turn in every assignment,鈥 the administrator said. 鈥淵ou have kids with anxiety about exams. ... We say, 鈥楬ey, [you] are a good student; [you] get a little weirded out with the exam, but let鈥檚 continue to challenge yourself.鈥欌
But May cautioned that educators and administrators need to go beyond lifting barriers and encouraging students to enroll in challenging courses. They must understand what students, particularly those from groups underrepresented in advanced courses, need to succeed.
鈥淚n math, almost half of the African American kids taking an honors class drop back down [to regular math classes later on],鈥 May said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a big red flag. What kind of message are we sending? 鈥楾ry this; oh, it didn鈥檛 work out, let鈥檚 kick you back down.鈥 Not good. If you get the kid to commit to a more challenging course, you鈥檝e got to make sure the supports are there for them to succeed.鈥
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