August 30, 2016
Do I dare
Disturb the universe?
from “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” by T.S. Eliot
from “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” by T.S. Eliot
Did you miss the
headline in last week’s Denver Post?
ACT scores show many
grads not ready for college-level work
Easy to shrug off, if we
think that’s not true about our state,
our district, our high school. But it is.
Earlier this month, Chalkbeat
Colorado opened its story on our ACT scores with a Well done!
Colorado
is ending its run with the ACT college entrance exam on a high note. The
state’s overall average composite score last year was a 20.4, the highest it’s
been since the state began administering the test to high school juniors in
2001. http://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/co/2016/08/11/colorados-act-score-hits-peak-but-changes-to-high-school-test-are-coming/#.V79aC5grLIU
Which was true …
Year
|
2008
|
2009
|
2010
|
2011
|
2012
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015
|
2016
|
State
Average
|
20.2
|
20.0
|
20.0
|
19.9
|
20.0
|
20.1
|
20.3
|
20.1
|
20.4
|
… but, once we take a closer look,
little good news, especially for our urban high schools.
The
Denver Post gave us all of two sentences on the Colorado ACT
results:
This
year, Colorado juniors had an overall score of 20.4, up from 20.1 in 2015.
White students scored 21.9 on average in 2016, Latino students 17.7 and black
students 17.4.
And the Colorado
Department of Education simply published one page of numbers, including these. (The bottom two lines are my addition.)
11th Grade
COLORADO ACT Average Test Scores for 2016
Colorado ACT State Test Results
|
Student Count
|
English
|
Math
|
Reading
|
Science
|
Composite
|
Valid records
|
54,820
|
19.6
|
20.0
|
20.7
|
20.6
|
20.4
|
Eligibility
for Free or Reduced Lunch
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Neither free nor reduced lunch eligible
|
36,794
|
21.3
|
21.3
|
22.2
|
21.9
|
21.8
|
Total Free or Reduced Lunch Eligible
|
18,630
|
16.4
|
17.6
|
17.8
|
18.2
|
17.6
|
Race/Ethnicity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
American Indian or Alaska Native
|
413
|
16.5
|
18.2
|
18.4
|
18.6
|
18.1
|
Asian
|
1,833
|
21.5
|
22.7
|
21.9
|
22.5
|
22.3
|
Black or African American
|
2,608
|
16.3
|
17.3
|
17.5
|
18.0
|
17.4
|
Hispanic
|
16,639
|
16.5
|
17.7
|
17.8
|
18.3
|
17.7
|
White
|
31,721
|
21.5
|
21.3
|
22.4
|
22.0
|
21.9
|
Two or more races
|
2,042
|
20.9
|
20.7
|
22.0
|
21.5
|
21.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scores ACT considers college ready*
|
|
18
|
22
|
22
|
23
|
21**
|
GAP
|
|
+1.6
|
-2.0
|
-1.3
|
-2.4
|
-.6
|
*No doubt many will challenge this. More on this soon!
**Composite
is average of the four tests. (See
ACT: Understanding ACT Test Scores, Using Scores, and Scoring
Factors ...)
As an organization, ACT is
more willing to draw conclusions. Its recent
report on Colorado (“The Condition of College and Career Readiness - 2016 –
Colorado,” http://www.act.org/content/dam/act/unsecured/documents/state06_Colorado_Web_Secured.pdf), found:
-Only 25% of Colorado students
met all four ACT College Readiness Benchmarks.
-Only 49% of white
students, 24% of African-American students, and 17% of Hispanic students met
three or more benchmarks indicating “a strong likelihood of experiencing
success in college.”
ACT’s report shows the
significant gaps by race and ethnicity (as seen in graph on page 1) this way:
Percent of 2016 graduates meeting ACT benchmarks
|
English
|
Math
|
Reading
|
Science
|
COLORADO – All graduates
|
61
|
39
|
42
|
36
|
African
American
|
40
|
18
|
23
|
16
|
Hispanic
|
39
|
20
|
23
|
17
|
Asian
|
71
|
62
|
51
|
51
|
White
|
75
|
50
|
54
|
48
|
No one, I hope, will look
at that – and shrug!
**
Here, then, a last
attempt to argue that this news does
hit home, if we believe these tests are meaningful. If we believe these numbers
tell us something. As I do.
A last attempt because most
Colorado high school students will no longer take the ACT college entrance exam. The state board has decided to replace it with
the SAT beginning next spring. Unfortunate,
I believe, given what we could learn from staying with at least one national measure over a long period. We have now shifted from Iowa tests (early 1990’s)
to CSAP (1997) to TCAP (2012) to PARCC (2015).
Next spring, for high school juniors, another new test.
So before we toss the
final ACT results aside, I raise several questions based on what they might
tell us. I am well aware you might say
this makes WAY TOO MUCH of one test. I
let ACT make its own case for how it comes up with the scores it considers
college ready. (Addendum C.) And please note that it is quick to acknowledge
these scores are merely one factor “that
contributes to educational success” (Addendum
D). I have tutored Aurora high
school students the past five years.
Have I seen a number of College Track students with low ACT scores get
decent grades and enter four-year colleges? Absolutely! No one is claiming ACT scores mean
EVERYTHING. I would never say that.
I present recent ACT results
in specific schools—below—to examine our goals and reform efforts
and ask:
1. When we see
so many low-performing high schools in the metro area continue to perform so
poorly on the ACT—please note: for 5 years running—can anyone say we
have succeeded in bringing about significant high school reform in Denver and
nearby districts? (Yes, I repeat myself:
Another View has pointed to ACT
scores numerous times – see Addendum E.
Page 3 is just an update.)
2. Look
specifically at ACT scores for Montbello, Noel, North, West, and Aurora Central;
together they received almost $13 million in federal grants to raise achievement. Can DPS or APS say more students in these buildings
are now college ready? (Look too for the “new” schools that emerged after
closures.)
3. The state
and DPS set goals for students to graduate
college ready. Aspirational, perhaps—but serious? Who can argue that our graduation
requirements equate to college readiness? Look at the schools with high graduation rates and terribly low ACT scores; look at the high remediation rates for the minority of their graduates who go on to
a Colorado college. (This updates my 2015
commentary in The Denver Post, http://www.denverpost.com/2015/07/02/huidekoper-high-school-graduation-rates-arent-necessarily-a-reason-to-celebrate/.)
21 metro area high schools all
(except one)
with ACT scores under 17 in 2016
Schools in blue received*** a total of nearly $13 million
in federal turnaround funds between 2010 and 2016
District
|
School
|
2012
|
2013
|
2014
|
2015
|
2016
|
Change over 5 years
|
Adams
County 14
|
Adams City High School
|
15.6
|
16.2
|
16.1
|
15.9
|
16.6
|
+1.0
|
Aurora
Public Schools
|
Aurora Central H.S.
|
14.9
|
15.0
|
15.2
|
15.1
|
15.9
|
+1.0
|
Gateway H.S.
|
16.5
|
16.5
|
16.8
|
16.2
|
16.1
|
-.4
|
|
Hinkley H.S.
|
16.9
|
17.1
|
17.0
|
17.0
|
16.9
|
-
|
|
Denver
Public Schools
|
Bruce Randolph H.S.
(6-12)
|
16.0
|
15.2
|
16.4
|
17.1
|
15.8
|
-.2
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
15.5
|
15.6
|
16.0
|
14.8
|
16.4
|
+.9
|
|
Manual H.S.
|
16.1
|
15.7
|
16.1
|
16.2
|
16.3
|
+.2
|
|
Martin Luther King Early College
|
17.4
|
17.1
|
17.1
|
16.1
|
16.3
|
-1.1
|
|
Montbello H.S.
|
15.0
|
15.1
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
Collegiate Prep Academy
|
-
|
-
|
15.6
|
15.2
|
16.7
|
(+1.1)*
|
|
DCIS at Montbello
|
-
|
-
|
17.1
|
16.9
|
16.4
|
(-.7)*
|
|
High
Tech Early College
|
-
|
16.9
|
15.6
|
15.1
|
16.3
|
(-.6)*
|
|
Noel Community Arts
School
|
|
-
|
-
|
15.6
|
17.2
|
|
|
North H. S.
|
15.2
|
16.3
|
16.9
|
16.2
|
16.7
|
+1.5
|
|
Southwest Early College
|
17.3
|
16.1
|
16.4
|
16.7
|
16.9
|
-.4
|
|
Venture Prep H.S.
|
17.2
|
16.6
|
16.8
|
16.6
|
16.5
|
-.7
|
|
West H.S.
|
14.9
|
15.0
|
14.7
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
West Generation Academy
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
14.7
|
15.6
|
|
|
West Leadership Academy
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
15.2
|
15.6
|
|
DPS subtotal
|
|
16.07
|
|
|
|
16.36
|
+.29
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jefferson
County
|
Alameda International H.S.
|
16.3
|
16.1
|
16.5
|
16.3
|
16.9
|
+.6
|
Jefferson H.S.
|
14.8
|
15.1
|
16.1
|
15.6
|
16
|
+1.2
|
|
Sheridan
|
Sheridan H.S.
|
16.7
|
16.4
|
15.9
|
15.5
|
16.3
|
-.4
|
Westminster
50
|
Westminster H.S.
|
16.3
|
16.1
|
16.2
|
15.9
|
16.4
|
+.1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average
|
|
16.03
|
|
|
|
16.37
|
+.34
|
State
Average
|
|
20.0
|
20.1
|
20.3
|
20.1
|
20.4
|
|
*The
college readiness benchmark, according to ACT:
|
21
|
|
*ACT
explanation - Addendum C
**(Change
since opening year, which was after 2012)
***Federal Tiered Intervention Grants (TIG) to four schools
in Denver schools and one in Aurora where we still see ACT scores under 17 in
all but one of the “new” or “turnaround” schools.
Montbello High -
$3,388,350 (2010-11
– 2012-13)
North High School
- $3,106,922 (2010-11 – 2012-13)
Noel Middle School**-
$2,776,580 (2010-11 – 2012-13)
Aurora Central
- $2,500,000 (2013-14
– 2015-16)
West High
School - $1,113, 589 (2012-13
– 2014-15)
TOTAL $12,885,441
**Part
of the transformation of Noel led to a 6-12 school.
More
on these grants in Addendum F.
Bruce
Randolph Middle School also received a TIG grant ($1.5 million over three
years). The last most complete look at
the TIG funds to Colorado was produced by A Plus Denver in December 2013,
“Colorado’s Turnaround Schools -Make a Wish”
http://www.aplusdenver.org/A_Plus_Denver_News/press-release-colorados-turnaround-schools.
GRADUATION GOALS
versus COLLEGE READY GOALS
How
can we look at the ACT results and believe we will “graduate 80% of our
students college ready”?
STATE GOALS - The Colorado Department of
Education lists “four overarching
goals that are focused on supporting students through every step of their
schooling.” (http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdecomm/aboutcde)
1. Start Strong - Every student starts strong with a solid
foundation in grades preschool-3.
2.
Read by Third
Grade - Every student
reads at grade level by the end of third grade.
3.
Meet or Exceed
Standards - Every student
meets or exceeds standards.
4.
Graduate Ready - Every
student graduates ready for college and careers.
“Every.”
Yes, aspirational. But the state’s performance plan adds specific
targets:
Goal 4: Graduate Ready - “Every student graduates ready for college and
careers. Ensure every student graduates college and career ready by increasing
the graduation rate to 86.6% in 2016, with the goal of 90.7% by 2018. (Six-year
graduation rate).” (https://www.cde.state.co.us/cdecomm/cdeperformanceplan)
Let’s be clear: Goal 4 is
really about two different goals. To increase the graduate rate … AND to see
that students graduate ready for college and careers. As you see on the next page (Addendum A), when we put our ACT
results next to graduation rates we see no correlation. We are finding ways to increase graduation
rates in schools where a far smaller percentage graduate–the ACT tells us—are college
ready. I opened with a recent headline: “ACT
scores show many grads not ready for college-level work.” Exactly.
DPS GOALS: In the district’s Denver Plan, GOAL
3 is “Ready for College & Career”:
By 2020, the
four-year graduation rate for students who start with DPS in ninth grade will
increase to 90%.
By 2020, we will
double the number of students who graduate college and career-ready, as
measured by the increasing rigor of the state standard.
Denver
might say: at least they are stated
as two different goals. But re-read GOAL
3: “Ready for College.”
And don’t the ACT results show that in 2016, only five Denver high schools
are meeting this goal?
|
2016
|
Denver
School of the Arts
|
24.8
|
Denver
School of Science & Technology-Stapleton
|
24.2
|
Denver
School of Science & Technology-Green Valley
|
22.9
|
East
|
22.1
|
Denver
Center for International Studies
|
21.6
|
The college readiness benchmark,
according to ACT
|
21
|
(Not coincidentally, the top four above were
the only high schools rated “Distinguished” on the Denver’s School Performance
Framework - 2014.)
And at the other end, when
a school’s ACT average score is BELOW 17*, I assume you can agree that most graduates
are not college ready. But on the next page, also note how many
schools show graduation rates that “look” OK—even above the state average! (See
also Addendum B.) Again, we can
graduate 75% of our seniors, even when perhaps – a guess – less than 25% are
college ready.
Until there is a
correlation, let’s stop the nonsense of packing these two goals into one
phrase.
More importantly, let’s be
honest. Do we really intend to see our
students “graduate college ready”?
*See
College Simply: “Is a 17 on the ACT a good score? A 17 is pretty low. It places
you in approximately the 28th percentile nationally for all students who took
the ACT. For comparison purposes, a 17 on the ACT converts to a 910 on the SAT based
on College Board concordance for the new SAT.”
http://www.collegesimply.com/guides/17-on-the-act/
Another View, a newsletter by Peter Huidekoper,
represents his own opinion and is not intended to represent the view
of any
organization he is associated with.
Comments are welcome. 303-757-1225 / peterhdkpr@gmail.com
Addendum A – 21
local schools - comparing ACT, graduation rates, and remediation rates
NOT, clearly NOT, the same years
or the same students. But it does
illustrate my point. Colorado students
graduate from high school without the academic skills we equate with being “college
ready.”
|
|
2016
|
2015[1]
|
2014
|
|||
District
|
School
|
ACT[2]
|
# of graduates out of total in 12th grade
|
Graduation rate
|
Remediation rate[3]
|
# who needed
remediation out of number of graduates who attended Colorado colleges
|
# of students enrolled in 12th grade[4]
|
Adams
County 14
|
Adams City High School
|
16.6
|
267/366
|
73%
|
64.10%
|
50/78
|
392
|
Aurora
Public Schools
|
Aurora Central H.S.
|
15.9
|
212/479
|
44.3%
|
63.37%
|
64/101
|
722
|
Gateway H.S.
|
16.1
|
222/397
|
55.9%
|
51.72%
|
45/87
|
468
|
|
Hinkley H.S.
|
16.9
|
314/521
|
60.3%
|
50.69%
|
73/144
|
655
|
|
Denver
Public Schools
|
Bruce Randolph H.S. (6-12)
|
15.8
|
64/81
|
79%
|
75%
|
15/20
|
90
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
16.4
|
266/344
|
77.3%
|
57.83%
|
48/83
|
307
|
|
Manual H.S.
|
16.3
|
39/74
|
52.7%
|
76.19%
|
16/21
|
64
|
|
Martin Luther King
|
16.3
|
105/150
|
70%
|
49.18%[5]
|
30/61
|
144
|
|
Montbello H.S.
|
|
-
|
-
|
69.23%
|
36/52
|
284
|
|
Collegiate Prep Academy
|
16.7
|
56/80
|
70%
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
DCIS at Montbello
|
16.4
|
78/90
|
86.7%
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
High Tech Early College
|
16.3
|
63/81
|
77.8%
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
Noel Community
|
17.2
|
36/41
|
87.81%
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
North H. S.
|
16.7
|
95/134
|
70.9%
|
56.90%
|
33/58
|
228
|
|
Southwest Early College
|
16.9
|
26/59
|
44.1%
|
-
|
-
|
62
|
|
Venture Prep H.S.
|
16.5
|
24/30
|
80%
|
-
|
-
|
39
|
|
West H.S.
|
|
68/92
|
73.9%
|
75.53%
|
25/34
|
88
|
|
|
West Generations Academy
|
15.6
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
|
West Leadership
|
15.6
|
-
|
-
|
|
-
|
-
|
(DPS-
the district)
|
|
18.6
|
3,257/5,029
|
64.8%
|
62%[6]
|
|
|
Jefferson
County
|
Alameda International H.S.
|
16.9
|
158/170
|
92.9%
|
71.43%
|
40/56
|
191
|
Jefferson H.S.
|
16
|
76/118
|
64.4%
|
58.82%
|
20/34
|
166
|
|
Sheridan
|
Sheridan H.S.
|
16.3
|
64/71
|
90%
|
44.68%
|
21/47
|
125
|
Westminster
50
|
Westminster H.S.
|
16.4
|
376/568
|
66.2%
|
56.62%
|
89/136
|
535
|
State
Average
|
|
20.4
|
|
77.3%
|
35.4%
|
|
|
National
Average
|
|
20.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
Addendum B – 5 schools: Graduation rates vs. ACT scores - How is that
possible?
When schools with
markedly different ACT outcomes – see below—have equally “high” graduation
rates – equal to or above the state average! – is it not fair to ask if the
high school diploma at these schools represents a different level of
accomplishment, a significant difference in academic skills and knowledge? (Remediation rates* invite the same question,
but are not yet available for the class of 2015.)
To be specific, in 2014 juniors at Randolph and Lincoln scored 2 points
or more lower than the district
average. How is it possible that, a year later, the 2015 graduation rate at
Randolph and Lincoln can be 10 points higher
(over 77%) than the district average (under 65%)?
|
Grad rate in 2015 (seniors)
|
ACT score in 2014 (juniors)
|
DSST- Stapleton
|
81.9%
|
24.5
|
Bruce Randolph
|
79%
|
16.4
|
South High
|
78.6%
|
17.3
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
77.3%
|
16.0
|
John
Kennedy
|
76.7%
|
17.3
|
|
|
|
Denver
Public Schools
|
64.8%
|
18.4
|
STATE
AVERAGE
|
77.3%
|
20.1
|
*Remediation
rates: We only have remediation rates from the Department of Higher Education
for the class of 2014. DPS is using different criteria to determine remedial
rates, justifiably eager to get “actionable” data back to the schools much
sooner than DHE can provide; the district’s efforts to reduce remediation rates
in 2014-15 showed, by its own analysis, much lower remedial rates for high schools
like Lincoln and Manual in 2015. I
depend here on DHE’s findings, albeit two years old. As shown on page 4, remedial rates for the
class of 2014 from Lincoln (75%) and Randolph (58%) contrast sharply with the
remedial rate for DSST grads (15%). And
yet for these 3 schools, remarkably similar graduation rates.
Several other
schools claim a graduation rate of 70% or better even though the average ACT
scores in these schools is under 17: Alameda International High (Jeffco)–92%; Sheridan–90%;
Adams City High–73%; North High School – 70.9%; Martin Luther King– 70%.
Addendum C – ACT on college readiness benchmarks
From “The Condition of College and Career Readiness - 2014 –
Colorado,” https://www.act.org/content/dam/act/unsecured/documents/CCCR-2014-Colorado.pdf.
“The Benchmarks are scores on the ACT
subject-area tests that represent the level of achievement required for
students to have a 50% chance of obtaining a B or higher or about a 75% chance
of obtaining a C or higher in corresponding credit-bearing first-year college
courses. These college courses include English composition, college algebra,
introductory social science courses, and biology. Based on a sample of 214
institutions and more than 230,000 students from across the United States, the
Benchmarks are median course placement values for these institutions and as
such represent a typical set of expectations”
For more on the validity of ACT scores, see “How ACT assessments align
with state college and career readiness standards,” http://www.act.org/content/dam/act/unsecured/documents/Alignment-White-Paper.pdf.
See also “Why Scores on the ACT® Test Are Scores You Can Trust,” http://www.act.org/content/dam/act/unsecured/documents/Scores-You-Can-Trust.pdf.
Addendum D – ACT:
hardly the only key factor
ACT
acknowledges the test itself, and even academic preparation, is not the only
key factor in whether a student can be successful in college.
“We understand that academic readiness is just one of
several factors that contribute to educational success. One 2014 ACT report,
Broadening the Definition of College and Career Readiness: A Holistic Approach,
shows academic readiness—long the sole focus of monitoring college readiness—as
one of four critical domains in determining an individual’s readiness for success
in college and career. Crosscutting skills, behavioral skills, and the ability to
navigate future pathways are also important factors to measure and address. Together,
these elements define a clear picture of student readiness for postsecondary
education. To encourage progress, the educational system needs to monitor and
sustain all key factors of success.”
Addendum E – Thou dost repeat thyself!
Another View (2013- 2015) - on low-performing high
schools, often using ACT results
-#92 update-Brief follow-up
to AV#92 – Regional economic development works. Why not a regional recovery
school district? A look at the overall decline
in ACT scores, at 16 metro-area high schools–2012 to 2013 (Sept 2013)
-“2013 results for high schools
in DPS and metro area –a quick check,” (Huidekoper, Sept. 2013)
“If measuring ACT
scores and growth—or declines—is helpful in speaking of the college-readiness
of DPS high school juniors, the year before they graduate, the rising district
score is good to see, but the results in over half of DPS high schools is not.”
-#114 – AP Initiative in
low-performing high schools (June 2014)
-#121 - More
federal dollars to Colorado for the School Improvement Grant? After $63
million,
time to say: No thanks.
We haven’t earned it. (Oct. 2014)
(includes a closer look
at grants to Brue Randolph and Aurora Central)
-#129 – High
schools – small is better (April 2015)
-#136 - Local
control” not enough; the state still has a key role in accountability - subheading: Though “only one test,” ACT results reminds us why we should not wait
until 2016-17 to act (Sept 2015).
Addendum F – Federal Tiered Intervention Grants, 2010-2016
Montbello High School – “Four
new schools replace Montbello High School over a four year phase-out. Phase in
of Collegiate Prep Academy, Noel Community Arts (6-12), Denver Center for
International Studies (6-12), and High Tech Early College.”
Noel Middle School - “Three
new school models replace Noel Middle School over a three year phase-out. Phase
in of Noel Community Arts (6-12), KIPP Montbello, and Denver Center for
International Studies (6-12).”
North High School – “Hired a
new principal and replaced many staff with new academic plan. North replaced
the first “turnaround” principal hired in 2008, with a new principal in 2011.”
(Summaries from A
Plus Denver’s Rays of Hope report on
school turnarounds, 2012.)
West High School – “The plan
to turnaround West High School has been underway since spring 2010 when west
Denver community leaders met with DPS leaders to discuss the future of West
High School…. Committee discussions led to the decision to phase out West High
School and phase in two new 6th-12th grade schools
co-located within the historic West High School building."
CDE web site
– TIG grant to Denver, West for 2012-2015 http://www.cde.state.co.us/sites/default/files/documents/fedprograms/dl/ti_a_stig_dps.pdf
Aurora Central High School –
“Aurora Public Schools will leverage the Tiered Intervention Grant funds to
provide the resources necessary to rapidly build the pedagogical capacity of
staff while establishing sustainable systems and structures to make the
transformational change that is required.”
CDE web site
– TIG grant to Aurora, Aurora Central for 2013-2016 http://www.cde.state.co.us/fedprograms/tigaurora
[2] Scores found at CDE’s web site, http://www.cde.state.co.us/assessment/coact
[3] From Colorado Department of
Higher Education’s 2015 LEGISLATIVE REPORT ON REMEDIAL EDUCATION,
submitted May 2016,
http://highered.colorado.gov/Publications/Reports/Remedial/FY2015/2015_Remedial_relMay2016.pdf
[4] # of students enrolled in
grade 12 from, CDE – 2013-14 Pupil Membership - http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdereval/rv2013pmlinks.
[5] Remediation rates under 50%
might appear a positive sign for that high school, but note that at Martin Luther King Early College, out
of a senior class of 144 in 2014, only 61 matriculated the next fall in a
Colorado college; at Sheridan High,
out of a senior class of 125, only 47 matriculated the next fall in a Colorado
college. Even with these low percentages
of students going on to higher education the very next fall, nearly half were
not seen as college ready in at least one subject, requiring remedial classes.
[6] Chalkbeat Colorado - http://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/co/2016/06/20/what-colorados-numbers-tell-us-and-dont-tell-us-about-who-needs-remedial-work-in-college/#.V8SEXJgrLIU – “DPS reported that its district-wide remediation rate had
declined from 62 percent for the class of 2014 to 50 percent for the class of
2015.”