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[SpecialTopics 87] Persistence Discussion

David Rosen

djrosen at comcast.net
Wed Jul 5 16:33:07 EDT 2006


Special Topics List Discussion Colleagues,

John Comings, Director of the National Center for the Study of Adult
Learning and Literacy, will join us on July 10th to discuss the
persistence study he has done. John has written an introduction,
below, and included links to reports of the first two phases of the
study. I hope you can read these before July 10th. You are welcome
to submit questions, ideas and comments for John beginning now, but
these will not be posted until July 10th.

i am looking forward to your joining in on this important discussion.

David J. Rosen
Special Topics Discussion List Moderator
djrosen at comcast.net
--------------

When a group of us at World Education were preparing to write the
proposal for the funds that have supported NCSALL, we surveyed
practitioners and policy makers around the country to help us design
our research agenda. Almost 500 people participated in the survey. We
asked the survey participants to send us the questions that they
wanted answered to help them improve practice in ABE, ESOL, and GED
programs. One question was at the top of the list for teachers and
second on everyone else's list. One teacher phrased it this way,
"Just when they begin to make progress, many students leave the
program. How can I keep those students long enough that they can
meet their educational goals?"

That question formed the basis of a three-phase study of persistence.
The first two phases are complete. The first phase surveyed the
literature, interviewed 150 students in the six New England states,
and identified ways that programs were trying to support the
persistence of their students. The report of that first phase can be
found at:

<http://www.ncsall.net/fileadmin/resources/research/report12.pdf>

In the second phase, 9 library literacy programs were provided with
funds to implement interventions that might help improve persistence,
and our study team observed the programs and interviewed their staff
and students. We also followed a cohort of 180 students for 14
months. The report of that second phase can be found at:

<http://www.mdrc.org/publications/401/overview.html>

We are prepared to implement the third phase, but NCSALL no longer
has funding to begin a new research project. This next phase would
test three interventions. One would add persistence supports to
existing classroom programs, one would use a wide range of modes of
learning (in programs and through self study on-line and in other
ways) that more closely match the way adults manage their learning,
and the third would combine these two approaches. I believe the third
approach is a promising way to solve the persistence problem, as well
as it can be solved.

I'm looking forward to your questions, but I would also be interested
in practical ideas of how to build support to persistence and how to
expand opportunities for learning.

John Comings, NCSALL Director
National Center for the Study of Adult Learning and Literacy
Harvard Graduate School of Education
7 Appian Way
Cambridge MA 02138
(617) 496-0516, voice
(617) 495-4811, fax
(617) 335-9839, mobile
john_comings at harvard.edu
http://ncsall.gse.harvard.edu









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