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Thursday, October 31, 2013

UPDATE: Study: Dual credit benefits kids in richer schools | Hechinger Report

Study: Dual credit benefits kids in richer schools | Hechinger Report:

Study: Dual credit benefits kids in richer schools

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Taking courses for college credit while in high school may be a good way to get a head start on an expensive higher education—and graduate on time—but new research in Illinois says it’s more available to kids in wealthier than in low-income, schools, who already do well academically.
“These data suggest there are large inequities in students’ access to college courses.” –Study coauthor Jason Taylor
A study by the Illinois Education Research Council at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville found that more students were enrolled in dual-credit college courses in high school students in suburban and rural areas with larger enrollments of whites and smaller numbers of low-income families, and that excelled in such things as grades, test scores, and attendance.
Urban areas serving larger proportions of low-income and nonwhite students, including Chicago, had much lower rates of participation, the researchers found.
Previous studies have shown that students who take college courses while in high school are more likely to go on to higher education, and take less time to graduate than their counterparts who don’t.
Some 1.3 million students took classes for university credit before completing high school during the 2010-2011 academic year, according to new figures from the U.S. Department of Education. That’s up 67 percent since 2003.
Eight out of 10 high schools nationwide offer university-level courses to their students, the





Next to the book, nothing will change education more than digital learning
One of history’s earliest education disruptions came with the invention of the printing press.   The book, of course, followed, and both had huge implications for education — just as new technologies do today. But it is how we use these technologies that really matters most, says Frederick (Rick) Hess of the American Enterprise Institute,  who happens to be the author of a new book out this week w

Oakland Unified launches push to expand linked learning academies
EdSource Some superintendents have a pat answer when asked to assess the quality of their schools – they’re all equally good, they might respond. But Gary Yee, the new acting superintendent of Oakland Unified School District, had a different  answer when parent Maria Zaragoza asked why her child’s high school does not have any of the innovative educational programs available at some of the distric


Research suggests poor quality of teacher training programs in U.S. compared to other countries
The United States has some of the best university-based math teacher training programs in the world. But we also have some of the worst – and those poor performing programs produce 60 percent of the country’s teachers in schools with the highest percentage of students living in poverty, according to research released earlier this month from William Schmidt, co-director of the Education Policy Cent