Indiana University

News Release

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Last modified: Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Indiana University report calls for higher expectations and tougher courses at high schools

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Education and training beyond high school are necessary as Indiana moves from a manufacturing economy to one based on information, high tech and the life sciences. Yet high schools continue to produce too many graduates who are ill-prepared for either the workforce or successful academic pursuits, according to a new policy brief issued by Indiana University Bloomington's Center for Evaluation and Education Policy.

The report comes as educators and policymakers nationwide focus more attention on high school reform. CEEP Director Jonathan Plucker said research suggests that students are entering high schools better prepared academically than they have been in perhaps a generation. By the time they graduate, however, these gains have diminished.

CEEP's policy brief, titled "Redesigning High Schools to Prepare Students for the Future," cites numerous studies concerning the preparedness of high school students for the workforce or postsecondary education, and offers recommendations for how educators and policymakers can get high schools on the right track. School staff's low expectations of students' academic potential and limited curricular offerings are just some of the hurdles school administrators and staff face in revamping their schools.

"Clearly research that we've highlighted in the policy brief illustrates that when expectations are raised for all kids, they generally meet the challenge, whereas when students are placed in lower-level classes, even high-performing students underperform their peers," said Terry Spradlin, CEEP associate director for education policy.

The policy brief points to successes in Indiana, however, noting research from Indiana University that shows Indiana students perform significantly better on such measures as the SAT college entrance exam and college persistence if they completed Indiana's Core 40 high school curriculum or earned the state's Academic Honors Diploma.

"Indiana also has been recognized nationally for its efforts to revamp its high school curriculum, and the efforts of K-12 and higher education leaders to align student expectations," Spradlin said.

The report makes the following recommendations:

High school preparation:

Curriculum changes:

Define essential skills:

Broad reform needed:

CEEP promotes and supports rigorous program evaluation and policy research primarily, but not exclusively, for education, human services and non-profit organizations. Its research uses both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. To learn more about CEEP, go to http://www.ceep.indiana.edu.

Spradlin can be reached at 812-856-4781 and tspradli@indiana.edu.


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