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Giving children of farmworkers an education like that offered to children of doctors

September 24, 2019

Giving children of farmworkers an education like that offered to children of doctors

BY BENJAMIN DURAN

SEPTEMBER 20, 2019 06:00 AM, UPDATED SEPTEMBER 20, 2019 06:00 AM

I grew up in a family of migrant farmworkers, working in the Central Valley fields with my parents and seven brothers and sisters. But since elementary school, I only ever wanted to be a teacher. My own teachers helped make this dream a reality. They believed in my potential and paved the way for me to become an educator and eventually Merced College president. They also inspired my lifelong mission to advance educational equity.

I’m heartened that a new report, Getting There, shows that changes underway in the Central Valley will help make sure children of doctors and children of farmworkers have the same shot at succeeding at a community college.

Getting There examines colleges’ progress in implementing Assembly Bill 705, a law that addresses the poor outcomes and inequities of traditional remediation. In the past, most California community college students were required to take remedial courses based on their performance on a standardized placement exam, and just 18 percent of students would complete a transferable, college-level math course in a year. Among students required to take remedial English or math, only 41 percent would transfer or complete a degree in six years, compared to 70 percent of students not required to take those classes.

AB 705 is overhauling these awful statistics because colleges must now employ multiple measures instead of a standardized exam, so as to place students into courses that give them the best chance of completing the gateway English and math courses required for a bachelor’s degree. The law is already doing more to close the achievement gap and bring equity to higher education than any public policy I’ve seen in decades, but to achieve its promise, colleges must implement AB 705 in the fullest possible spirit of the law.

That’s because students’ initial placement in English and math is the largest driver of racial achievement gaps in college completion. It is estimated to account for 50 to 60 percent of equity gaps in students’ completion of long-term goals like earning a degree, completing a certificate program, or transferring to a four-year university.

Among the three regions studied in Getting There, the Central Valley has the highest proportion of colleges deemed “strong implementers” of AB 705, meaning that remedial classes make up less than 10 percent of our introductory English and math offerings. Porterville College is offering 100% transfer-level classes in both English and math. At Reedley College, just 2 percent of introductory English and math offerings are below that level. West Hills, Lemoore and College of the Sequoias eliminated remedial English and are close to doing the same with math.

This is a big change from two years ago, when AB 705 was signed into law. In fall 2017, almost half of the region’s introductory English classes were remedial, with college composition comprising only 52 percent of introductory reading and writing courses. Fast forward to today, and that number has jumped to 93 percent.

These are incredible gains, but there’s more to do.

Central Valley colleges are still offering too many remedial courses, especially in math. Non-transferable courses make up 24 percent of introductory math across the region, and at a couple of colleges, they make up more than 40 percent of the schedule.

This matters — research shows ALL students are more likely to complete their coursework when they enroll directly into college-level courses than when they start in remediation. Plus, when colleges put their limited resources into maintaining so many remedial classes, there won’t be enough seats in transfer-level classes for the students who are legally entitled to take them.

Instead of continuing to hang onto ineffective remedial classes, Central Valley colleges need to continue their efforts to ensure that their course schedules meet the AB 705 standard of maximizing student completion. If we can’t identify any students who actually benefit from taking remedial classes, we shouldn’t be using our limited public dollars to offer them.

When we set high expectations for students, students will meet them. When we set low expectations, students will meet those, too. As a young boy, I was able to make my dreams come true because people believed in me enough to open the doors of opportunity. Let’s put our faith in our students’ capacity on full display — let’s go all-in on AB 705, and offer classes that give students the best chance of completing their degree and reaching their goals in a timely manner.

Dr. Benjamin Duran is the executive director of the Central Valley Higher Education Consortium, and president emeritus of Merced College.

 

Read Full Report Here | CAP Report v8

 

The original post can be found at https://www.mercedsunstar.com/opinion/article235281187.html

0 0 Pablo https://cvhec.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/CVHEC-Logo-Primary-Color-Medium-e1728590737483.png Pablo2019-09-24 14:17:152019-09-24 14:17:15Giving children of farmworkers an education like that offered to children of doctors

Getting There: Are California Community Colleges Maximizing Student Completion of Transfer-Level Math and English?

September 17, 2019

Getting There: Are California Community Colleges Maximizing Student Completion of Transfer-Level Math and English?

September 2019

A new law, Assembly Bill 705 (Irwin), is driving dramatic changes in how California Community Colleges place students into English and math courses. Beginning in fall 2019, AB 705 requires the colleges to use students’ high school grades as the primary means of placement; restricts colleges from denying students access to transferable, college-level courses; and gives students the right to begin in courses where they have the best chance of completing the English and math requirements for a bachelor’s degree.

This report—a collaboration of the Campaign for College Opportunity and the California Acceleration Project—analyzes early AB 705 implementation efforts at 47 community colleges in the Central Valley, the Inland Empire, and greater Los Angeles. We examine fall course schedules and websites to identify bright spots and problems in implementation, with particular focus on the extent to which college course offerings are aligned with the AB 705 standard of “maximizing” student completion of transfer-level math and English courses.

Read Full Report Here | CAP Report v8

 

The original post can be found at https://accelerationproject.org/Publications/ctl/ArticleView/mid/654/articleId/76/Getting-There-Are-California-Community-Colleges-Maximizing-Student-Completion-of-Transfer-Level-Math-and-English

 

0 0 Pablo https://cvhec.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/CVHEC-Logo-Primary-Color-Medium-e1728590737483.png Pablo2019-09-17 14:30:272019-09-17 14:30:27Getting There: Are California Community Colleges Maximizing Student Completion of Transfer-Level Math and English?

California’s inland region key to statewide vitality

June 24, 2019

California’s inland region key to statewide vitality

By KARTHICK RAMAKRISHNAN |
PUBLISHED: June 21, 2019 at 6:24 pm | UPDATED: June 21, 2019 at 6:24 pm

 

When it comes to investing in California, the smart money is heading inland, home to one of the most robust employment, innovation and opportunity centers in the United States. That might surprise those who still view the Inland Empire and Central Valley as distant outposts — barely mentionable in the same sentence as coastal California. In fact, not only has the inland region long served as the industrial and agricultural backbone of the state, it’s where investors are placing their bets and, in the process, helping build what we can now legitimately brand as the new California.

Inland California, which includes the Inland Empire and Central Valley, is home to 30% of the state’s population, and growing significantly faster than the state as a whole. The economic output of Inland California is also massive. At $436 billion in GDP (2015), the region’s economy equals the 15th largest state in the United States and the 25th largest country in the world.

We’re also younger, with one third of the population is under the age of 25, providing employers here with a pipeline of workers they won’t find anywhere else.

These are some of the reasons why so many emerging industries, from healthcare and transportation to alternative energy and advanced manufacturing, look to places like the Inland Empire for their next wave of major investments.

The state sees it too, which is why the California Air Resources Board (CARB) is investing more than $400 million in a state-of-the-art vehicle-emission testing and research facility at the University of California Riverside.

In San Bernardino County, state grants will help pay for what will ultimately become North America’s first zero-emission passenger trains as part of the Redlands Passenger Rail System.

In addition, the region has won two major grants from the Strategic Growth Council, totaling over $55 million in investments that provide for affordable housing and community development in key transit corridors. More broadly, these kinds of investments represent a growing recognition — in the public, private and philanthropic sectors — of how important the Inland Empire is to the state’s long-term vitality.

Indeed, private philanthropic foundations have significantly increased their investment in the Inland Empire over the past several years, from $61.3 million in 2013 to $115 million three years later. This increase has mostly been driven by investments from outside the region that more than doubled, from $46 million to $98 million. Our Center for Social Innovation was created from these kinds of investments, with nearly $2 million in seed investments from the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation, James Irvine Foundation, and Weingart Foundation in 2018, and an additional $1.2 million since.

We are not resting on our laurels, however, and neither is the region. Last month, officials and stakeholders from throughout the Inland Empire, Central Valley and the state gathered in Riverside for the first regional summit of Inland California Rising – an unprecedented effort to find common cause and attract even more investments to regions like ours that represent the future of California.

Importantly, we were not simply talking amongst ourselves. Senior leaders from the Newsom administration, from economic development to higher education and planning, used the occasion to announce a major statewide initiative called Regions Rise Together where Inland California will play a significant role.Foundation leaders attended, too, including four CEOs and senior program officers from Southern California funders like Weingart, to statewide funders like the James Irvine Foundation, to national and global funders like the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. All are interested in learning about the progress being made, and are committed to increasing public, private, and philanthropic investments in the Inland Empire and Central Valley. And we are already seeing tangible signs of progress, such as the creation of Opportunity Zone fellowships from FUSE Corps that will benefit Fresno and the Inland Empire alike, and engagement from Milken Institute and others to build a stronger tech ecosystem in the region.

California’s future is inland. Critical investments in the region’s innovation economy, civic leadership, health, and education, are vital to ensuring prosperity in the region and fulfilling the promise of “California for all.”

 

Original post can be found at https://www.dailybulletin.com/2019/06/21/californias-inland-region-key-to-statewide-vitality/?fbclid=IwAR31dNgtm3x94zD9OigyAu4MQtjo9hvZ-Csy5HC5FPLIUA5LScBYzMpv3MM

0 0 Pablo https://cvhec.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/CVHEC-Logo-Primary-Color-Medium-e1728590737483.png Pablo2019-06-24 10:22:332019-06-24 10:22:33California’s inland region key to statewide vitality
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