EDUCATION NOTEBOOK:
A Student-Centered Approach to the Dropout Crisis
November 16, 2006
Walk into a classroom full of freshman high school students this
semester and picture this: Almost a third of those students will
drop out before graduation day. According to the , the public high school graduation rate for
the class of 2003 was 70 percent. And the graduation rate was far
lower for minority students; just 55 percent of African American
and 53 percent of Hispanic students completed high
school.
That so many students fail to earn a diploma imposes social
costs on our country. It also levies a serious personal price on
individual students. Census statistics show that high school
dropouts earn about $200,000 less than high school graduates during
their working lives. And there's no way to quantify the entire
costs of a lifetime without a high school education.
In October, the National Education Association released its plan
to solve the school dropout crisis. It recommends the same tired
policies the organization throws at every problem in education:
increase taxpayer spending on education and expand government's
control over Americans' lives.
The NEA plan would create new programs ("high school graduation
centers for students 19-21 years old"), expand public education to
include universal preschool and full-day kindergarten, and add $10
billion to federal education spending.
The NEA's most shocking recommendation is to make high school
graduation or equivalency compulsory for everyone below
the age of 21. All states already have compulsory attendance laws
that require children to enroll in school up to the age of 16, 17,
or 18, depending on the state. Extending that age to 21 would
sentence millions of Americans to spend three or more years in a
public school system that already proved inadequate.
Imagine how this might sound to a person who dropped out of high
school at age 18. That student has been forced to attend public
schools that he was (in most cases) assigned to by the government
since he was seven. Whether or not he had access to high quality
instruction and a safe learning environment was largely outside of
his control. After nearly a dozen years, he decided there is little
point to remaining in school. But the NEA wants to keep them in the
system's grip.
Rather than making it illegal not to finish high school,
policymakers ought to consider strategies to encourage children to
finish school by meeting their individual needs.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation recently published an
important studying the dropout problem from the students'
perspective. Former students point to several common reasons for
dropping out. For example, 47 percent said classes weren't
interesting, and 45 percent said they started high school poorly
prepared by their early schooling. Many students cited personal
reasons, from needing to earn money to needing to care for a family
member.
The survey also studied what might have kept students in school.
Common responses included improving teaching and curricula to make
school more relevant, enhancing the connection between school and
work, improving teacher quality, and creating school environments
that focus on academics. Fully 57 percent of dropouts said their
schools didn't do enough to make students feel safe. Seven in ten
favored increased supervision, and 62 percent supported more
classroom discipline.
The Gates Foundation report proposes a number of strategies to
address these problems, but the most promising is to provide
different schools for different students. "Instead of the usual
'one-size-fits all' schools," the report explains, "districts
should develop options for students, including a curriculum that
connects what they are learning in the classroom with real life
experiences and with work, smaller learning communities with more
individualized instruction, and alternative schools that offer
specialized programs to students at-risk of dropping out."
The dropout problem won't be solved by any one policy-and
certainly not by the NEA's tired big government plan. Policymakers
should start by looking at the students' perspective and students'
individual needs. Meeting those needs begins providing more options
that will ensure more students access to a safe and quality school
that best meets their unique needs.
Dan Lips is an Education
Analyst at the Heritage Foundation www.Heritage.org.