High school students in many states are more academically prepared for college than they were 10 years ago, but they also face greater financial obstacles in trying to acquire a postsecondary degree, asserts a study that examines trends in all 50 states over the past decade.
The report, 鈥淢easuring Up 2004,鈥 suggests, on the one hand, that changes in elementary and secondary education have resulted in students鈥 taking more rigorous courses in areas such as science and mathematics.
View data from or read the , from . (Full report requires .)
But the same study, conducted by the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, also finds that those gains were uneven from state to state. And it concludes that college prices are rising faster than many families鈥 incomes, making education less affordable and posing a serious long-term threat to the nation鈥檚 economic well-being.
鈥淭hese findings should summon a renewed sense of urgency in all of us,鈥 former North Carolina Gov. James B. Hunt Jr., the chairman of the center鈥檚 board of directors, said at a meeting held here last week where the report was released. 鈥淲e have an agenda here that cannot be deferred without serious consequences for our people, our economy, and our country.鈥
The report is the third such study conducted by the center, a research and policy organization located in San Jose, Calif., but the first to evaluate trends over a 10-year period. It gives all 50 states individual letter grades, from A to F, in six categories based on how well they provide access to and preparation for college. The study also measures college-completion rates and the overall postsecondary education and economic well-being of adults in those states.
For the first time, the 鈥淢easuring Up鈥 study also evaluates individual states on the qualifications of their educators, as measured by the percentage of those working in 7th through 12th grade classrooms with a major in the subject they teach.
Signs of Progress
When it comes to students鈥 academic readiness for college, there are signs of progress, the report finds. From 1992 to 2002, 44 states showed improvement on most of the indicators of academic preparation, including the number of high school students taking at least one upper-level science and mathematics course, the number of 8th graders taking an algebra course, and the number of students with scores of 3 or higher on a 5-point scale on Advanced Placement tests.
Moving Ahead More secondary students than ever are enrolling in courses that will prepare them for college, according to a new study. Some states have made great strides in academic preparation for college in the past decade. | ||
9th to 12th graders taking at least one upper-level math course: | 1992 | 2002 |
---|---|---|
Nebraska | 39% | 61% |
New York | 34 | 55 |
Texas | 38 | 59 |
West Virginia | 34 | 59 |
9th to 12th graders taking at least one upper-level science course: | ||
Nebraska | 23 | 38 |
West Virginia | 24 | 44 |
8th graders scoring at or above 鈥減roficient鈥 on national math exams: | ||
California | 14 | 39 |
Idaho | 14 | 27 |
West Virginia | 12 | 25 |
SOURCE: National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education |
鈥淲e can no longer attribute all of our college access and quality problems to the failure of public schools,鈥 said Patrick M. Callan, the president of the center, in a statement describing the findings. 鈥淗igh schools have improved over the last 10 years,鈥 he argued, 鈥渁nd we haven鈥檛 seen commensurate higher education gains.鈥
The status of only two states had improved over the past decade in promoting affordability in higher education, according to such indicators as the percentage of income that families devote to college costs and the amount of financial aid devoted specifically for needy students.
Likewise, only eight states had improved in promoting participation in college in that time frame, while 23 states had mixed results and 19 showed a drop in performance.
Those results also led the study鈥檚 authors to conclude that the chief barrier many teenagers face in achieving a college education is financial, not academic, as some have claimed. (鈥淏arriers to College: Lack of Preparation Vs. Financial Need,鈥 Jan. 21, 2004.)
States and institutions need to do more to help families, particularly low-income ones, overcome high college costs, the authors contend.
鈥淲hat has been a pretty good excuse for why kids don鈥檛 go to college . looks to be a dodge,鈥 said Anthony P. Carnevale, a senior fellow at the National Center on Education and the Economy, who participated in a roundtable discussion about the report with the authors on the day of its release.
That discussion included political, business, and education leaders from across the country, including Virginia Gov. Mark Warner and board members of the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education.
Virginia B. Edwards, the editor and publisher of Education Week, is a member of that board.
Mr. Carnevale maintained that higher education institutions were at risk of becoming a 鈥渂outique鈥 service, available to mostly well-heeled families, because of the unmet needs of students with less well-to-do backgrounds.
鈥楢 Dark Side鈥
While he did not dispute the report鈥檚 findings, David T. Conley, who has conducted extensive research on academic preparation for college, cautioned that high school students鈥 progress on that front should not be overstated.
Vast disparities exist in the quality of advanced courses in subjects such as mathematics and science offered in high schools, Mr. Conley noted in a phone interview. Classes bearing 鈥渦pper-level鈥 titles, such as those discussed in the study, too often fail to prepare students for higher education, he noted, particularly the rigors of the freshman year.
鈥淲hat concerns me is the gap between the haves and have-nots,鈥 said Mr. Conley, the director of the University of Oregon鈥檚 Center for Educational Policy Research. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have an indication that the success of students [in] college is changing. ... What may look like a good trend on paper may have a dark side to it.鈥