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Preparing High School Students for College: An Exploratory Study of College Readiness Partnership Programs in Texas. Executive Summary

Authors :
National Center for Postsecondary Research (ED)
Barnett, Elisabeth A.
Corrin, William
Nakanishi, Aki
Bork, Rachel Hare
Mitchell, Claire
Sepanik, Susan
Source :
National Center for Postsecondary Research. 2012.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

This paper presents an executive summary of a study that examines a number of college readiness partnership programs operating in Texas and identifies their features, targeted students, and intended outcomes. It also examines the partnerships that created these programs. The findings presented here are based on a search and analysis of the relevant research and Texas policy literature, an online scan of college readiness partnership programs in Texas with a web presence, and site visits to high schools, colleges, and community-based organizations in the Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth areas. The authors observed that most college readiness partnership programs could be classified into two types: those that focused on academic subjects and those that focused on college knowledge. The former tended to be intensive, short-term programs that targeted a small group of students and provided a direct experience of college; the latter tended to be light-touch, long-term programs that were open to all students and provided little direct experience of college. The authors identify a number of implications for college readiness partnership programs and the partnerships themselves. It is clear that college readiness partnerships create opportunities for secondary and postsecondary institutions to leverage each other's services, eliminating redundant services and aligning programming to maximize gains for students. In some cases, college readiness partnership programs also lead to long-lasting relationships between institutions and continued collaboration. College readiness partnership programs may have the best chance of improving outcomes if commonly encountered challenges--such as issues related to student recruitment and program sustainability--are considered early in the planning stages. The authors emphasize the value of choosing interventions that show the greatest promise in a given context and matching students to the interventions that best meet their needs; they also note that building a stronger evidence base would enhance high schools' and colleges' ability to make sound decisions about which potential program models to implement. (Contains 1 figure.) [This paper was written with Heather D. Wathington, Joshua Pretlow, Beth Hustedt, Nikki Edgecombe, Alissa Gardenhire, and Nicole Clabaugh. For the full report, "Preparing High School Students for College: An Exploratory Study of College Readiness Partnership Programs in Texas," see ED532393.]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
National Center for Postsecondary Research
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
ED532398
Document Type :
Reports - Research