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School & District Management

Governors Urge High School Reform as a Top Priority

November 23, 2004 6 min read
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The nation鈥檚 governors are pushing high school reform as a way to build up the workforce in their states鈥攁nd to score major political points in the process.

Governors鈥 interest in improving high schools was on full display here earlier this month in a WVIZ television studio. A studio audience joined Cleveland-area public-TV viewers in watching a bipartisan duo, Gov. Bob Taft of Ohio and Gov. Mark Warner of Virginia, discuss ways to improve high schools. The town hall-style meeting aired live.

鈥淐learly, we鈥檝e got some ideas about how we can make high schools better, but you guys know better than us,鈥 Gov. Warner told the crowd. The Democrat has made high schools the focus of his work as this year鈥檚 chairman of the National Governors Association.

This is not the first time that governors have talked about the need to improve America鈥檚 high schools, though the NGA鈥檚 current effort is a powerful force in what has become a groundswell of interest by the private and public sectors over issues such as dropout rates, college readiness, and workforce training.

President Bush, too, has talked about high school policy, pledging in his post-election comments this month to raise the profile of high school issues in his second term. In his re-election campaign, he said he would seek more accountability and more testing in grades 9-12. (鈥淏ush Test Proposal for High Schoolers Joins Wider Trend,鈥 Sept. 15, 2004.)

Gov. Warner plans to hold similar meetings on high schools over the coming months in Arkansas, Maine, and New Mexico, with the help of governors in those states. What鈥檚 more, the NGA will convene many of the nation鈥檚 governors in Washington for what鈥檚 being billed as a national high school summit in February.

鈥淭hink about your own experiences, think about others鈥 experiences 鈥 and think about what it takes to help every student,鈥 Gov. Taft, a Republican, told the audience before the Cleveland broadcast.

With many of the state and federal efforts to improve education beginning to show incremental gains in the early grades, it鈥檚 only natural that policymakers would turn their attention to high school, some say.

鈥楶ocketbook鈥 Issue

鈥淭he whole country is really beginning to understand we鈥檝e had decades of policy neglect on high schools,鈥 said Hilary Pennington, a co-founder and the vice chairwoman of Jobs for the Future, a Boston-based nonprofit organization that works with policymakers on education and workforce issues.

Better data on education, more study of the high school dropout problem, and worries about losing jobs to other countries are forming a 鈥渢riple whammy鈥 that is leading policymakers to take a closer look at high school policies, she added.

Just as important, others say, is that the timing might be right for lawmakers to overcome competing concerns鈥攕uch as whether to focus on college preparation or employment training鈥攖o approve new policies for high schools. Observers also point to the added pressure to raise student achievement under the many mandates of the federal No Child Left Behind Act, the showcase initiative in education from President Bush鈥檚 first term.

鈥淕overnors are beginning to understand this in their pocketbooks,鈥 Ms. Pennington said. 鈥淚f states have large numbers of dropouts, it makes a huge difference in a state鈥檚 economic-development potential, in their tax revenues, and their states鈥 earning potential among their population.鈥

Betsy Brand, the director of the Washington-based American Youth Policy Forum, said the governors鈥 interest in high schools likely will translate into legislation and policy changes in the coming months and years.

鈥淭he states are going to be picking up on this, and they鈥檒l be doing most of the work,鈥 she said, 鈥渢o the extent that other legislation can be brought into alignment with some of the goals in No Child Left Behind to support increased accountability at the high school level.鈥

Ms. Pennington added that public high schools might benefit from competition from community colleges or other organizations that could offer high school diplomas. Higher standards for alternative educational settings will need to be developed, Ms. Pennington said. Right now, the nation has a 鈥渧ery second-class, second-chance system鈥 for those students, she said.

During the television broadcast, the governors heard Cleveland-area students, educators, parents, and others voice their thoughts on high schools.

Good Ideas?

Students in the audience鈥攁nd TV viewers by e-mail鈥攃omplained about the emphasis on standardized tests, inadequate K-12 funding, rising college costs, and insufficient teacher quality.

Ohio鈥檚 Mr. Taft, one of two chairmen of Achieve, a Washington organization founded by governors and business leaders that pushes for higher student achievement, talked up the need for more-demanding high school courses. He cited data suggesting that few unskilled jobs will remain in the United States past this decade, and that everyone will need at least a strong high school education.

鈥淚 sometimes like to say I have the last unskilled job in the state of Ohio,鈥 he quipped.

Virginia鈥檚 Mr. Warner told students that they can鈥檛 expect most states to get rid of high school exit exams, but that they should expect more chances to take college and career courses in high school.

鈥淲e need to realize high schools need reforms,鈥 he said.

In interviews before the broadcast, audience members shared other ideas for fixing the nation鈥檚 high schools.

Joffrey Jones, the superintendent of the 6,500-student Euclid, Ohio, schools, said his district is trying to build smaller environments within a large high school through a grant from Ohio鈥檚 Transforming High Schools Initiative. The state initiative is financed by the Seattle-based Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to personalize the schools,鈥 he said.

Parents need easy access to school leaders and teachers, added Carol Beasley, the districtwide PTA president for the Euclid public schools. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so many parents who don鈥檛 have that opportunity.鈥

Dean Bryson, a junior at Euclid High School, said schools need more teachers who are engaging and caring. 鈥淚f I respect the teacher more, I鈥檒l do better in her class,鈥 he said.

A senior at Cleveland Heights High School, Bruce Hampton, said he doesn鈥檛 like Ohio鈥檚 emphasis on standardized tests. Teachers spend too much time prepping students for the exams 鈥渋nstead of just education that鈥檚 going to help you in life,鈥 he said.

Kevin N. Golden, a senior at Cleveland Heights High, complimented his school鈥檚 array of vocational courses in health and other fields, but said many other schools in Ohio do not have such offerings.

The governors said they plan to act.

State Action

Gov. Taft, often aligned with business leaders in his state, said that high school reform is an issue of economics in Ohio. 鈥淭he preparation of our workforce is probably the number-one issue in Ohio,鈥 he said in an interview here. 鈥淚 hope the whole country鈥檚 coming together and focusing on this.鈥

Last week, the Ohio state board of education鈥檚 task force on high schools recommended more academic rigor, relevance for students, and stronger relationships between educators and their students.

He said that he may advocate more high school tests鈥攔ather than graduation tests only鈥攖o help educators assess the skills that young people bring to 9th grade. The goal, he said, would be to provide students help earlier and eliminate the need for remedial courses in college.

Gov. Warner said he and other state-level leaders are looking for systemic changes in high schools that will have long-term benefits for their states鈥攂ut also prove politically smart for governors.

He has begun several programs in Virginia aimed at improving vocational courses and giving high school students more consistent college credit for Advanced Placement courses. States also must take seriously the need for better remediation for students who are struggling academically. 鈥淭hose are some of the things that can be done quickly and cheaply,鈥 Mr. Warner said.

Both governors pointed to recent data showing that high school dropouts are more prevalent in the United States than many leaders had believed. Eleven states have high school completion rates of lower than 67 percent, according to Jobs for the Future.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 afford to lose that human talent anymore,鈥 Gov. Taft said.

A version of this article appeared in the November 24, 2004 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as Governors Urge High School Reform as a Top Priority

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