These posts are the opinions of the writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of A+ Colorado.


ACT Results Show: High School Graduation ≠ College Ready

By: Peter Huidekoper, Jr.

When our final ACT results were released last month, there was good news.

 Chalkbeat Colorado opened its story 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.

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.

As an organization, ACT has been more willing to draw conclusions.  Its recent report on our state, “The Condition of College and Career Readiness – 2016 – Colorado,”  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.”

Furthermore, ACT’s report shows the significant gaps by race and ethnicity 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

 

More problematic, 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?

And 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.)

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  

*(Change since opening year, which was after 2012) Scores found at CDE’s website.

 

Finally, and most troubling, the results expose the dubious claim that we “graduate students ready for college.”  When a school’s ACT average score is BELOW 17, I assume you can agree that most graduates are not college ready.  And yet many of these schools show graduation rates that “look” OK—even above the state average!  Then look at the high remediation rates for their graduates who do go on to a Colorado college. Four examples – here. (This updates my 2015 commentary in The Denver Post).

 

    2016 2015 2014
District School ACT # of graduates out of total in 12th grade Graduation rate Remediation rate[1]  # who needed remediation out of number of graduates who attended Colorado colleges # of students enrolled in 12th grade

 

Adams County 14 Adams City High School 16.6 267/366 73% 64.10% 50/78 392
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
Sheridan Sheridan H.S. 16.3 64/71 90% 44.68% 21/47 125
State Average 20.4   77.3% 35.4%    

 

To see our students “graduate college ready” is a worthy goal.  But let’s not pretend our graduation rates tell us anything about the academic skills our seniors need in order to succeed in college.

Colorado’s final ACT results (our juniors shift to the SAT next spring) raise the question: are we really serious about seeing that our students “graduate college ready”?  If we are, let’s be honest: we have a long way to go.

 

These are excerpts from Another View #152 – Final ACT results invite questions about our high schools – and much more.  A full copy is available at http://anotherviewphj.blogspot.com/

 

[1] 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