THE STATE
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF |
TO: |
Full Board |
FROM: |
Jean C. Stevens |
SUBJECT: |
Closing the Achievement Gap: Setting a Target for High School
Graduation Rate |
DATE: |
October 16, 2006 |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 1 and 2 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for Discussion
What direction should the Board of Regents give to staff for next steps in setting a target for graduation rate as part of the Regents strategy for improving high schools?
Review of policy.
Proposed Handling
This question will come before the Full Board in October.
Procedural History
The Regents have received and discussed proposed strategies to close the gap in high schools and to improve graduation rates. In September, the Regents received possible options for establishing accountability targets for graduation and high school attendance rates.
Background Information
Among the potential strategies to close the gap in high schools is to set
targets for graduation for all students. The Regents would use the accountability
provisions under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and Schools Under Registration
Review (SURR) to establish consequences for districts and schools that do not
make adequate progress. The
attached report provides a conceptual proposal for setting graduation rates, an
analysis of the likely effect of establishing more rigorous targets, the
possible consequences for schools that fail to meet these targets as well as the
resources available to support such schools, and a snapshot of research-based
strategies for improving graduation rates.
Recommendation
Staff recommend that the Regents review the proposal on setting a target for graduation rate and provide direction for staff on next steps.
Timetable for Implementation
Based on the direction of the Regents, actions/discussions would be scheduled on the 24-month Regents calendar.
Setting Targets for Graduation
Rate
Background Information
The current graduation-rate standard for accountability is 55 percent, lower even than the 64 percent four-year graduation rate achieved by the 2001 Total Cohort. A higher graduation rate standard would communicate clearly to districts and schools the Regents expectation that all students graduate from high school.
A higher standard will work to improve graduation rates in two ways: (1) more schools will be required to raise their rates; and (2) the lowest performing schools will be required to increase graduations at a faster rate. With the current standard, only schools below 55 percent are required to improve and those schools are only required to improve by one percentage point per year.
Tables 1 and 2 illustrate graduation rates of the 2000 Total Cohort after five years and the 2001 Total Cohort after four years. Some things to note about these data:
· These rates count graduates as of June 30 and do not include August graduates.
· In 2007-08 when the Total Cohort is used for graduation-rate accountability, the rate will include students who graduate in August of the fourth year of high school.
· The tables include graduation rates for schools with cohorts of 30 or more students.
· There are 178 schools whose 2000 total cohort graduation rates after five years is below 70%. Staff are developing a methodology to move schools onto or off of the list of targeted high schools. (To date the Department has identified 127 high schools that have a graduation rate lower than 70% and are either a School Requiring Academic Progress or a School in Need of Improvement.)
Table
1
2000
Total Cohort Graduation Rate After Five Years
Graduation
Rate Interval |
Number of
Schools |
Percent of
Schools |
below
55 | ||
86 |
9.8 |
|
55
to 59% | ||
23 |
2.6 |
|
60
to 64% | ||
30 |
3.4 |
|
65
to 69% | ||
39 |
4.4 |
|
70
to 74% | ||
48 |
5.5 |
|
75
to 79% | ||
82 |
9.3 |
|
80
to 84% | ||
143 |
16.3 |
|
85
to 89% | ||
146 |
16.6 |
|
90
to 94% | ||
168 |
19.1 |
|
95
to100% | ||
115 |
13.1 |
|
Total | ||
880 |
100.0 |
Table
2
2001
Total Cohort Graduation Rate After Four Years
Graduation
Rate Interval |
Number of
Schools |
Percent of
Schools |
below
55 | ||
185 |
20.4 |
|
55
to 59% | ||
29 |
3.2 |
|
60
to 64% | ||
33 |
3.6 |
|
65
to 69% | ||
63 |
7.0 |
|
70
to 74% | ||
84 |
9.3 |
|
75
to 79% | ||
109 |
12.0 |
|
80
to 84% | ||
122 |
13.5 |
|
85
to 89% | ||
127 |
14.0 |
|
90
to 94% | ||
97 |
10.7 |
|
95
to100% | ||
57 |
6.3 |
|
Total | ||
906 |
100.0 |
Of the reported schools, only 17 percent have graduation rates of 90 percent or higher after four years, but 32.2 percent achieve that rate after five years. Adding August graduates to the four-year rate would increase it by an unknown but probably significant amount.
To set a higher standard for graduation rate, the Board must make two critical decisions:
· What should the State standard or goal for graduation rate be?
Staff recommend that the target be set at
90%.
· How much improvement should schools below that standard be required to make each year?
Staff recommend that the Board adopt the
improvement schedule described below. It is our understanding from discussions
with key school leaders that this would represent a more aggressive approach
than other options discussed, but one that is achieveable by districts across
the State.
This option would begin with the 2006 Total
Cohort, (the cohort of students who entered ninth grade in 2006) with the
following annual percentage point increases required to close the gap between
the 2004 Total Cohort graduation rate and the State standard of 90
percent:
·
Schools with a graduation rate below 55%
3 % per year
·
Schools with a graduation rate between 55%
and 74.9 % 2
% per year
·
Schools with a graduation rate between 75%
and 89.9%
1% per year
The table provided in Attachment A shows how the graduation rate targets would play out for 11 schools that fall across the entire spectrum of graduation rate performance for the 2001 cohort.
Research-Based
Strategies for Improving Graduation Rate
The
Southern Regional Education Board (SREB) in its Getting Serious About High School
Graduation report has outlined four strategies to increase graduation rate.
"1) Set ambitious high school graduation targets for all groups of students and
make them a part of state accountability systems. 2) Focus attention on the
ninth grade. 3) Reform high schools, particularly those that are low performing,
to make them more relevant to and effective for all students. 4) Communicate key
stay-in-school messages to students in danger of dropping out and to their
families."
In
Dollars & Sense: the cost
effectiveness of small schools,
According to Getting Serious About High School
Graduation, the
most commonly suggested strategies for preventing high school dropout and
increasing graduation rates are:
Consequences for
Schools That Fail To Meet Graduation-Rate Targets
Schools that fail to meet their graduation-rate targets for two consecutive years are identified as Schools Requiring Academic Progress under the State accountability system. Schools that have received Title I funding in each of those years are also identified as Schools in Need of Improvement under Title 1. To be removed from improvement status, the school must make their target for two consecutive years. In any year that an identified school again fails to meet its target, it advances to the next level of identification. Under the State system, it goes from School Requiring Academic Progress (SRAP) Year 1 to Year 2, Year 3, and so on. If a School in Need of Improvement (SINI) continues to receive Title I funding, it will advance from Year 1 to Year 2, Corrective Action, Planning for Restructuring and Restructuring.
Table 4 notes the key requirements for schools at each level under the State and federal systems.
Table 4
Requirements for Schools in Improvement Status
State Status |
Requirements |
Federal Status |
Requirements |
SRAP (Year 1) |
School Improvement Plan |
SINI (Year 1) |
Public School Choice School improvement plan |
SRAP (Year 2) |
School Improvement Plan |
SINI (Year 2) |
Public School Choice School improvement plan |
SRAP (Year 3) |
Corrective Action Plan |
Corrective Action |
Public School Choice Corrective Action Plan |
SRAP (Year 4) |
Plan for Restructuring |
Planning for Restructuring |
Public School Choice Supplemental Educational Services Plan for Restructuring |
SRAP (Year 5) |
Restructuring |
Restructuring |
Public School Choice Supplemental Educational Services Restructuring |
The primary source of technical assistance and support for SRAP schools are local school districts, with assistance from the Department’s regional technical assistance centers. Schools in Need of Improvement, or in Corrective Action, Planning for Restructuring or Restructuring status receive support from SED-funded Regional School Support Centers as well as other SED affiliated technical assistance networks. Districts with schools in federal improvement status also receive grants to support implementation of improvement plans.
Graduation rate could also be used to
identify Schools Under Registration Review (SURR). The Commissioner would
identify those schools with graduation rates farthest from State standards. SURR schools are given performance
targets by the Commissioner that they must meet or risk having their
registration revoked. Upon identification, SURR schools are subject to a
registration review visit conducted by an external team led by a District
Superintendent. Upon completion of
the visit by the team, the school is required to develop a school improvement
plan and the district is required to develop a corrective action plan. Each SURR school is assigned an SED
liaison who is on-site from one day per week to one day per month, depending on
which part of the process the school is implementing. SURR schools are eligible
to receive a State-funded SURR grant and receive the highest priority for
support from the
In addition to the resources identified
above for each category of school, the Regents State budget priorities include a
request to provide $13 million in the first year and $39 million upon full
implementation for a program of academic intervention teams and distinguished
educators.
Under the proposal, the Commissioner will
assign an academic intervention team to each school and district in the State
that is identified for corrective action.
The purpose of the intervention teams is to build the capacity of local
educational agencies to successfully undertake corrective actions that result in
improved student achievement consistent with State standards. Teams made up of administrators and
content experts will provide targeted technical assistance in at-risk
schools. A substantial portion of
this proposed funding would support schools identified for graduation
results.
Next Step
Direction for staff is needed from the Board of Regents on whether staff should provide additional information to inform the Board’s decision to set a target for graduation rate or develop preliminary regulatory language to implement policy that sets a State standard and targets for improving the graduation rate of school districts.
Attachment A
Recommendation:
Beginning with the 2006 Cohort each school below 55 percent must increase by 3
percentage points annually; each school between 55 and 74.9 percent must
increase by 2 percentage points annually; and each school between 75 and 89.9
percent must increase by 1 percentage point annually.
District |
School |
2001
Total Cohort |
Graduation-Rate
Target for | |||||||||
Total
Stu-dents |
Number
of grad-uates |
Percent
Grad-uates |
2004
Cohort (1%) |
2005 Cohort
|
2006
Cohort |
2007
Cohort |
2008
Cohort |
2009
Cohort |
2010
Cohort |
2011
Cohort | ||
Greenburgh-Graham
|
Martin
Luther King,Jr |
33 |
2 |
6.1% |
7.1% |
8.1% |
11.1% |
14.1% |
17.1% |
202.1% |
23.1% |
26.1% |
|
Louis
D. Brandeis |
457 |
158 |
34.6% |
35.6% |
36.6% |
39.6% |
42.6% |
45.6% |
48.6% |
51.6% |
54.6% |
|
Bennett
|
340 |
161 |
47.4% |
48.4% |
49.4% |
52.4% |
55.4% |
58.4% |
61.4% |
64.4% |
67.4% |
|
|
82 |
49 |
59.8% |
60.8% |
61.8% |
63.8% |
65.8% |
67.8% |
69.8% |
71.8% |
73.8% |
|
Oneonta
Senior |
162 |
112 |
69.1% |
70.1% |
71.1% |
73.1% |
75.1% |
76.1% |
77.1% |
78.1% |
79.1% |
|
|
72 |
54 |
75.0% |
76.0% |
77.0% |
78.0% |
79.0% |
80.0% |
81.0% |
82.0% |
83.0% |
Broadalbin-Perth
|
Broadalbin-Perth
|
139 |
110 |
79.1% |
80.1% |
81.1% |
82.1% |
83.1% |
84.1% |
85.1% |
86.1% |
87.1% |
Perry
Central |
Perry
HS |
94 |
79 |
84.0% |
85.0% |
86.0% |
87.0% |
88.0% |
89.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
Cazenovia
Central |
Cazenovia
HS |
146 |
128 |
87.7% |
88.7% |
89.7% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
|
Division
Avenue Senior HS |
248 |
230 |
92.7% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
Blind
Brook-Rye |
Blind
Brook HS |
75 |
75 |
100.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |
90.0% |