Latest Graduation Data Reveal an Ongoing Crisis for California’s Highest Need Students

EdVocate West Blog
June 19, 2012
Written by: Arun Ramanathan

For the second year in a row, the California Department of Education (CDE) has released accurate and transparent graduation and dropout rate data thanks to the state’s use of CALPADS, the California Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System. The data once again reveal that California’s schools are graduating Latino, African-American, and low-income students at alarmingly low rates.

  • The data show that three out of four (76%) of our state’s students are graduating from high school in four years.
  • Sadly, the news is far worse for the state’s African-American, Latino, and low-income students, who graduate from high school at abysmally low rates—63% and 70%, respectively.
  • Education outcomes for students of color, students with disabilities, low-income students, and English learners, whose needs and potential are often overlooked, are particularly disturbing when compared with the graduation rates of their more advantaged peers. For example, California’s white students graduate at a rate of 86% and Asian students at a rate of 90%.

“Even though these rates are improving, at the rate California is going, it will take us 13 years to close the graduation gap between Latino and African-American students and their white peers,” said Arun Ramanathan, Executive Director of The Education Trust—West, a statewide education civil rights organization. “Every high school dropout is an individual tragedy. Tens of thousands of dropouts represent a large scale-tragedy for the California economy and our state’s future prosperity. It’s time we stopped talking about this problem and invested in the strategies that top districts and schools are using to fix it.”

Learn more about this report.

Part 2 of the TED Radio Hour: How Can Videos "Flip The Classroom"?

"In order for the teachers to get you through the next hurdle, they have to make it more memorization based. And so what we say is no, let's just to do the opposite." — Salman Khan

TED Radio Hour
June 22, 2012
TED/NPR Staff

In 2004, Salman Khan, a senior hedge fund analyst, began posting math tutorials on YouTube for his cousins. Six years later, he’s posted more than 3,200 carefully structured educational videos offering complete curricula in math and other subjects.

In his TEDTalk, Khan demonstrates the power of interactive exercises and calls for teachers to consider flipping the traditional classroom script. He suggests giving students video lectures to watch at home, and says they should do “homework” in the classroom with the teacher available to help.

Follow part 2 of the TED Radio Hour episode Building A Better Classroom.

 

Audio: Renewed Hope for One Undocumented Student

KQED NEWS
June 17, 2012
Mina Kim

Friday was a day of celebration for many young people in the country illegally. President Obama announced the U.S. will no longer deport them if they’re under 30 years old, have been here five years and have no felony record. Undocumented students can now study here legally. One recent UC Berkeley grad has lived under the threat of deportation most of his life. His dream? listen to the rest of the audio file to find out.

Part 1 of the TED Radio Hour: How Do Schools Suffocate Creativity?

"There's a terrible tendency to confuse raising standards with standardizing." — Sir Ken Robinson

KQED News
June 22, 2012
Written by: NPR/TED Staff

Part 1 of the TED Radio Hour episode Building A Better Classroom. Watch Sir Ken Robinson’s full Talks — Schools Kill Creativity and Bring On The Learning Revolution — on TED.com

About Sir Ken Robinson’s Talks

In his first Talk, Schools Kill Creativity, education expert Sir Ken Robinson makes a moving case for creating an education system that nurtures, rather than undermines, creativity.
In the second Talk, Bring On The Learning Revolution, he makes the case for a radical shift from standardized schools to personalized learning — creating conditions where kids’ natural talents can flourish.

Listen to this compelling series here.

Oakland Graduates Series

Margarita Brizuela, Arise HS College: Mills College
Roxanna Ambriz, Arise HS College: Chico CSU
Kwodwo Moore, Emery Secondary HS College: East Bay CSU
Greg Belvin, Skyline HS College: University of West Georgia
Diana Ocampo, Arise HS College: UC Santa Cruz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Congratulations to these American Graduates! In the next couple of weeks we will share their inspiring stories and get an insight as to what they look forward to in college and beyond.