[FamilyLiteracy 352] Re: Community College Remediation EducationSheryl Fiaux sherryfiaux at yahoo.comSat Sep 9 14:23:37 EDT 2006
At the Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI), students do not get credit for remedial courses, although they are less expensive than credit classes. I seem to recall there being restrictions on the financial aide for these classes, but I'm not sure. I'll look into is and report back. Gail Price <gprice at famlit.org> wrote: That sounds very reasonable Sheryl. Certainly it would be a good introduction to the structure of a college class. I wonder if the students get any academic credit for the remedial class? Often students elect to build skills through an adult education program rather than pay for a class that gives them no college credit. Are there community colleges that provide free remedial classes? How does it work in your locale? On Sep 8, 2006, at 1:42 PM, Sheryl Fiaux wrote: My students who are interested in pursuing a higher education usually like the remedial college courses. I teach ESOL, so I think it is a smaller step and gives them the confidence to begin taking college courses. Gail Price <gprice at famlit.org> wrote: The following article appeared in the September 8 PEN Weekly Newsblast. The figures are pretty impressive. Are those of you who work in adult education seeing an increase in the number of students who have high school diplomas, but want to build skills to avoid paying for college remedial classes? Are your adult education programs offering any special classes or services to these students to help prepare them to be successful in college? PAYING DOUBLE According to "Paying Double: Inadequate High Schools and Community College Remediation," a new issue brief from the Alliance for Excellent Education, the United States spends over $1.4 billion each year to provide community college remediation education for recent high school graduates who did not acquire the basic skills necessary to succeed in college or at work. The brief, which was produced with support from MetLife Foundation, also finds that the nation loses almost $2.3 billion annually in wages as a result of the significantly reduced earnings potential of students whose need for remedial reading make them more likely to drop out of college without a degree. Therefore, by increasing the number of students graduating from high school prepared to succeed in college, an additional $3.7 billion annually would flow into the nations economy. The brief offers no simple solutions but does point out that improving the nations high schools could certainly reduce the number of students who need remediation in college. It points to "weak curricula, vague standards, and lack of alignment between high school content and the expectations of colleges and employers" as reasons for the need for remediation. It adds that students who take a rigorous high school curriculum are less likely to need remedial courses than students whose course load is less demanding. Finally, it suggests that statewide performance standards for college admission would enable educators to assess student progress toward readiness for college. To view the complete issue brief, which includes a breakdown of state-by-state costs, visit: http://www.all4ed.org/publications/remediation.pdf Gail J. Price Multimedia Specialist National Center for Family Literacy 325 West Main Street, Suite 300 Louisville, KY 40205 Phone: 502 584-1133, ext. 112 Fax: 502 584-0172 ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Family Literacy mailing list FamilyLiteracy at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/familyliteracy --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail. ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Family Literacy mailing list FamilyLiteracy at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/familyliteracy Gail J. Price Multimedia Specialist National Center for Family Literacy 325 West Main Street, Suite 300 Louisville, KY 40205 Phone: 502 584-1133, ext. 112 Fax: 502 584-0172 ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Family Literacy mailing list FamilyLiteracy at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/familyliteracy --------------------------------- Get your own web address for just $1.99/1st yr. We'll help. Yahoo! Small Business. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/familyliteracy/attachments/20060909/e85c8ede/attachment.html
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