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Autor/inn/enMokher, Christine; Leeds, Daniel; Harris, Julie
InstitutionCNA Corporation
TitelAssessment of the Florida College and Career Readiness Initiative: 2018 Final Summary Report
Quelle(2018), (14 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext kostenfreie Datei Verfügbarkeit 
ZusatzinformationWeitere Informationen
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
SchlagwörterCareer Readiness; College Readiness; Grade 11; Grade 12; Mathematics Achievement; Language Arts; Academic Achievement; Student Evaluation; School Districts; Program Implementation; Compliance (Legal); School Involvement; Scores; High School Students; Graduation; College Attendance; Developmental Studies Programs; Enrollment Trends; Program Effectiveness; Outcomes of Education; Costs; State Standards; Standardized Tests; Achievement Tests; Florida; Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test
AbstractFlorida enacted legislation in 2008 for a statewide program known as the Florida College and Career Readiness Initiative (FCCRI), which was intended to reduce the need for postsecondary remediation. The FCCRI consisted of testing grade 11 students to determine their college readiness and offering math and English college readiness and success (CRS) courses in grade 12 for students who did not test college-ready the year before. FCCRI is based on the theory that providing college readiness testing and CRS courses in high school may raise students' awareness of their academic deficiencies and motivate them to further develop college-level skills in their senior year. We found considerable variation across districts and schools in the initiative's implementation and level of compliance with state requirements for participation. We estimated program impacts using two different methods. First, we used a regression discontinuity design to compare outcomes for students scoring just above and below test score cutoffs for assignment to the FCCRI. Among the two cohorts of students required to participate in the FCCRI, we found little to no effect on short-term outcomes including high school graduation, college enrollment, and enrolling in or passing nondevelopmental courses. There is little evidence for improved enrollment or pass rates in for-credit coursework among the highest- and lowest-performing targeted students. However, enrollment and pass rates in transition and degree credit courses were similar for students on the margins of assignment to college readiness courses in either subject, indicating that students just below college-ready were able to "catch up" by the time they enrolled in college. There were also few differences between marginal targeted and non-targeted students on longer-term outcomes including persistence, transfer, nondevelopmental enrollment and pass, and degree completion rates. Second, we examined the effect of offering the FCCRI to students from a wider range of academic performance levels by using regression analysis to compare student outcomes for targeted students in schools before and after the schools implemented the FCCRI. As with the regression discontinuity analyses, we found that the FCCRI had little to no effect on most short-term student outcomes. We did find that the treatment group was more likely to both take and pass nondevelopmental courses in math and English. Although the average effects were small, the magnitudes of these effects were quite large for some portions of the achievement distribution, with effects of up to 10.7 percentage points for the treatment group. Finally, we estimated the cost for the FCCRI's ongoing implementation at $57 per targeted student in the 2014/2015 school year, with about 63 percent of per-student program costs incurred at the school level ($36), 33 percent at the district level ($19), and 3 percent at the state level ($2). We also found that while net costs exceeded benefits for the FCCRI as a whole, program effects and costs varied both within and between districts. (As Provided).
AnmerkungenCNA Corporation. 4825 Mark Center Drive, Alexandria, VA 22311. Tel: 703-824-2000; e-mail: inquiries@na.org; Web site: http://www.cna.org
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2020/1/01
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