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Spring 2004
It's Time To Tell the Kids: If
You Don't Do Well in High School, You Won't Do Well in College (or on the
Job)
By
James E. Rosenbaum
Every year I ask my college class how many students have
seen a high school teacher cry, and most students raise their hands. When I
ask what provoked the crying, most stories are about teachers who threaten
to give students bad grades and students who do not care. When I ask my
colleagues the same question about their high school teachers from one or
two generations ago, virtually none can recall such tears. This is not a
systematic survey, but it suggests a big change.
Today, nearly all high school seniors believe that they are
going to college--and that bad grades won’t stop them. They are right: With
the dramatic increase in open admissions colleges, it is true that they can
go.
But as I report in my recent book Beyond College for All,
students who perform poorly in high school probably won’t graduate from
college--many won’t even make it beyond remedial courses. High enrollment
rates and low graduation rates are well-known facts of life in most open
admissions and less selective colleges (both two- and four-year). The tight
connection between high school preparation (in terms of both the rigor of
courses taken and grades received) and college completion are well known to
statisticians, researchers, and policymakers who follow such matters.
But research suggests that students still do not understand
this connection. Consider the following: Seventy-one percent of the class of
1982 planned to get a college degree. Ten years later, 63.9 percent of those
with A averages had attained an A.A. degree or higher, but only 13.9 percent
of those with C averages (or lower) had done so (Rosenbaum, 1998, 2001). (In
a more recent cohort [the class of 1992], students with C averages or lower
fared a little better; 20.9 percent attained an A.A. degree or higher within
eight years of graduating from high school [Rosenbaum and Gordon-McKeon,
2003]). As of 1992, 84 percent of high school seniors planned to get a
college degree (NELS, 1992); but data from the high school classes of 1972,
1982, and 1992 tell us that only 45 to 49 percent of students who enter
college and earn more than 10 credits actually earn a bachelor's degree--many
even fail to earn 10 credits (Adelman, 2004). For students with high school
averages of C or lower, the chances that they will earn even one college
credit are less than 50-50 (Rosenbaum, 2001). Do your students know
that? Do your colleagues? Did you know that?
Despite the availability of open admissions institutions and
increased student aspirations for college degrees--factors that increase
college enrollment--the easiest-to-use predictor of a student’s
likelihood of graduating from a two- or four-year college is still
his or her high school grade point average.*
Although any single grade is imperfect, when averaged over a high school
career, the grade point average is an excellent predictor of how a student
will do in college. This has always been true and there is no reason to
expect it to change. Unfortunately, our well-intentioned efforts to
encourage all students to go to college regardless of their grades
inadvertently gives them the impression that high school grades don’t
matter.
In this article, we will look at the facts, indeed the
tragedy, behind the façade of widespread college entry--and at what we can
do to change the picture, either by increasing the odds that college
enrollment will lead to college graduation or by helping students find more
productive, successful post-high school paths.
New Dreams, New Misconceptions
The past 40 years brought three radical social transformations that together
have dramatically increased the percentage of students who want to attend
college. First, the earnings advantage of college graduates has grown
(Grubb, 1996). Second, college--especially community college (a minor factor
in the prior generation)--has become much more accessible. In the past four
decades, while enrollments at four-year colleges doubled, enrollments
increased five-fold at community colleges (NCES, 1999). Third, and perhaps
most remarkably, virtually all community colleges adopted a revolutionary
policy of open admissions. Unlike many four-year colleges, virtually all
two-year colleges opened their doors to admit all interested high school
graduates, regardless of students’ prior academic achievement. Even high
school graduates with barely passing grades are routinely welcomed because
almost all two-year colleges offer a wide array of remedial courses. Indeed,
in many cases, students do not even have to be high school graduates because
most two-year colleges offer these students access to some non-credit
courses, including GED courses.
These three transformations have dramatically altered the
rules of college attendance and given students remarkable new opportunities.
However, as with all revolutions, there are also unintended consequences.
The revolutions spawned a set of myths--we’ll call them misconceptions--that
combined to send a message to students: Don’t worry about high school grades
or effort; you can still go to college and do fine. This message has not
been sent to high achievers aiming for prestigious colleges, where grades
and scores matter--and the students headed there know it. But it is the
message that students who know little about college have
received--particularly those whose parents did not go to college. These
students (and their parents) are being misled with disastrous consequences.
Their motivation to work hard in high school is sapped; their time to
prepare for college is wasted; their college savings are eaten up by
remedial courses that they could have taken for free in high school; and
their chances of earning a college degree are greatly diminished. Further,
the effect on many colleges has been to alter their mission and lower their
standards.
This article reviews some of the misconceptions spawned by
these three revolutions and rebuts them--and considers how schools can
mitigate the terrible impact these misconceptions are having on individual
students and, inevitably, on the overall school environment.
Misconception 1: College success is not linked to
high school preparation.
A national survey (NELS, 1992) found that 84 percent of high school seniors
in the class of 1992 planned to get a two- or four-year college degree. Even
students with bad grades, low test scores, and poor high-school attendance
planned to complete a college degree. Attaining a college degree can be
difficult even for students who have worked hard and done well in high
school; for those who haven’t, it is nearly impossible. Look at the table
below on grades and college completion for the class of 1982. On average,
37.7 percent of seniors with college plans earned a two-year or higher
degree. But low high school grades cut students’ chances markedly--only 13.9
percent of seniors with averages of C or lower completed college. For this
13.9 percent, open admissions at community colleges provided an extremely
helpful second chance. However, for the vast majority of students, the other
86 percent, their second chance was only another experience of failure.
Shouldn’t we tell the students: If you want to graduate from college, exert
the effort and get good grades in high school?
Misconception 2: College plans lead to increased school effort.
It is often assumed that planning to go to college makes students more
motivated, giving them reason to work hard in high school. Unfortunately,
this is often not the case. For many decades, work-bound students believed
that high school achievement would not influence their future careers (Stinchcombe,
1965), but now many college-bound students also hold this belief. In a
survey of over 2,000 seniors in 12 urban and suburban high schools,
researchers found that almost 40 percent of college-bound students believed
that school effort had little relevance for their future careers (Rosenbaum,
1998; cf. Steinberg, 1996).
|
In the class of 1982, 86 percent of
college-bound students with poor grades didn't graduate from college |
|
Average high school grades |
As |
Bs |
Cs or lower |
All |
|
Percentage attaining A.A. or higher |
63.9 |
37.1 |
13.9 |
37.7 |
|
Percentage not attaining any degree |
36.1 |
62.9 |
86.1 |
62.3 |
|
Seniors with college plans (A.A. or higher) who complete
an A.A. degree or higher within 10 years of high school graduation. |
|
Source: Beyond College for All: High School
and Beyond data. |
Misconception 3: High school homework doesn’t matter
for college success.
Since open admissions policies allow everyone to enter college, no matter
how poorly they do in high school, some students report that they can wait
until college to exert academic effort. But research shows that effort
during high school is absolutely essential. Take homework, for example:
Students doing no homework end up with 1.2 years less education and 19
percent lower earnings than average. Students doing 15 hours or more a week
of homework attain almost 1.5 more years of education and attain 16 percent
higher earnings than average. This 2.7-year spread in educational attainment
and 35 percent spread in earnings are both extremely large (especially
considering that these outcomes are associated with variation in
self-reported homework time in high school).
Misconception 4: Going to college means taking
college-level classes.
If you are taking classes in a college, are you taking college classes? Not
necessarily. Many college students" are actually in remedial courses--high
school-level classes (or even lower) that give no college credits (Deil-Amen
and Rosenbaum, 2002). The best estimates of the extent of remedial education
come from careful analyses of college transcripts from national samples of
students in the classes of 1982 and 1992. From 1982 to 1992 there has been
substantial improvement in the need for remediation among students
entering four-year colleges. Forty-four percent of those from the class
of 1982, but only 25 percent from the class of 1992 (still too many), took
at least one remedial course. Unfortunately, there has not been a similar
improvement among students entering two-year colleges. Sixty-three
percent of those from the class of 1982, and 61 percent from the class of
1992, took at least one remedial course (Adelman, 2004). A more recent
survey in two urban community colleges found that 25 percent of students
were taking three or more remedial courses (Deil-Amen and Rosenbaum, 2002).
Moreover, in an effort to reduce students’ feelings of
inferiority, college advisors often downplay the fact that courses are
remedial. As a result, many students do not even realize the nature of
their coursework. In one research survey, students were given a list of
the colleges’ remedial courses, asked which ones they had taken and whether
the courses counted toward a degree. From interviews with administrators,
the researchers knew that none of these courses counted toward a degree.
Unfortunately, most students did not (see chart below). Among first-year
students taking three remedial courses, 36 percent reported that these
courses counted, and another 48 percent were not sure. Even among
second-year students taking three remedial courses, 36 percent believed the
courses counted for college credit and 44 percent were unsure (Deil-Amen and
Rosenbaum, 2002).
Misconception 5: Going to college for a two- or
four-year degree takes two or four years.
How long does a two-year associate’s degree take? If you think the answer is
obvious, you are wrong. At one community college, a top administrator
confided that because of remedial needs, a "two-year associates degree"
takes full-time students an average of 3.5 years to complete.
Statistics like this are not widely known--with three serious implications.
First, since the remedial courses often carry no credit, students who plan
for two-year or four-year degrees discover that they cannot complete their
degrees in the time they have scheduled or within the budget they have
planned. Second, their failure to collect credits is exacerbated by the
"secret" nature of the remedial courses; discovering after 1.5 years that
you are still two years away from a two-year degree is not only
demoralizing, but may present virtually insurmountable time and budget
problems. Third, high school students heading toward college do not
understand college remedial placements. They know that their older peers who
graduated high school with poor grades went on to college--and they assume
they can, as well. But most high school students probably do not realize
that these "college students" are not accumulating college credits and are
unlikely to graduate. This partial picture may encourage lax academic effort
and college-for-all fantasies on the part of many high school
students--maybe even on the part of school faculty. (These fantasies are fed
by high school administrators who boast about the high percentage of
students they send to college--but neglect to mention how few graduate. More
on this later.)
Misconception 6: School counselors should not offer
discouraging words about the hard work
necessary for college success.
Given the widespread public belief in the misconceptions above, counselors
rarely discourage college plans or suggest alternatives. A recent study in
eight diverse urban and suburban high schools found that even if students
had poor grades, school counselors did not dissuade them from attending
college, nor did they warn students when they had poor chances of college
success (Krei and Rosenbaum, 2001; Rosenbaum, Miller, and Krei, 1997).
National data suggest that these practices are widespread. While only 32
percent of a national survey of seniors in 1982 indicated that their
counselors urged them to go to college, 10 years later, fully 66 percent of
seniors made the same statement (Boesel, 2001; Gray, 1996). Indeed, 57
percent of seniors in the bottom half of the academic rankings reported that
counselors urged them to attend college.
In interviews we conducted with counselors, it was clear that counselors who
do wish to warn students that they are unprepared for college believe that
they lack the authority to do so (Rosenbaum et al., 1997). As one counselor
said, "Who am I to burst their bubble?" At the same time, counselors report
that when they warn students that they are unprepared for college, parents
complain, and principals support the parents. Counselors are not sure they
have the authority to be candid and to report that students are not well
prepared for college. The following example, though just an anecdote, offers
some sense of the pressures that counselors feel. A student with an IQ of 70
wanted to be a doctor, and although the counselor tried to explain the
difficulties this student would face, he ultimately advised the student to
attend "a two-year college first and see how it goes."
Clearly, some counselors do not feel free to give their
professional opinions. If they are too candid, they can be accused of "low
expectations," even if their concerns arise from students’ school records.
When counselors fear they may have to pay for honestly explaining students’
future options, they back away from doing so. They not only yield to
parents’ wishes, but they sometimes change their initial advice to avoid
trouble. Many counselors report that they advise students with D-averages to
attend a community college and later transfer to a four-year college. One
student with a D-average wanted to apply to Harvard, so his counselor
suggested that he could begin at community college and then look to transfer
to Harvard after two years. The college-for-all mentality is a perfect way
to avoid unpleasant issues that are likely to arise as students make plans
for the future.
In the past, counselors often acted as "gatekeepers,"
advising low-achieving students on alternatives to college (Cicourel and
Kitsuse, 1963; Rosenbaum, 1976), including providing advice about which
non-college training options could lead to well-paid, respected occupations
and even using their contacts to place non-college-bound students into
respectable jobs. (For more information on the importance of high school for
the non-college bound, see Sidebar: All Good
Jobs Don't Require a College Degree....)
If heavy-handed gatekeeping by counselors has indeed become
less common, no one will grieve its loss; only two generations ago,
counselors often had a decisive, sometimes secretive, impact on which
colleges students would apply and go to. But if counselors are not giving
students the information they need about the requirements for completing
college, then many students may be aimlessly drifting through high school
and community colleges without any notion of what requirements they will
have to meet to earn a degree. In that case, gatekeeping has not ended, it
has only been deferred, and many students will haplessly find themselves
failing out of college without any forewarning of what is happening. Today,
many students are making college plans that are not likely to be realized.
Parents, administrators, counselors, and teachers must work together to
understand the connection between high school effort and college
success--and to convey this reality to students. It should go without saying
that counselors can’t take on this countercultural mission on their own. In
the next article, high school staff can see what students need to know to be
prepared for college; for distribution to students, a college fact sheet (What
You Need To Do in High School If You Want To Graduate from College).
The New Rules of the Game
Beyond the negative effect that the college-for-all push has on individual
students, there is the broader negative effect it has on high schools’
academic climate. Seeing that college access is guaranteed, some students
believe that they can challenge teachers’ authority and suffer no penalty;
some teachers may respond to their diminished authority by leaving the
profession or by reducing their demands on students (Sedlak et al., 1986).
While these changes have their greatest impact on low-achieving students,
even high-achieving students will be in classes where teachers’ authority is
questioned, and such students may wonder if they could prepare for college
with less effort.
Those looking for justice may see it in the finding that
unmotivated students will end up worse off--stuck with remedial classes,
fewer college credits and degrees, and lower earnings. But this is not a
happy ending. Students waste their high school years, disrupt high school
for others, drag down the standards in high school, and force colleges to
provide high school courses as an increasingly larger segment of their
curriculum.
How can we improve the situation? Since the playing field
has drastically changed in the world of higher education, new "rules of the
game" have arisen. New high school practices must be established to match
them. These new rules of college can be summarized succinctly:
-
All students can plan to get a college degree; but if they
are unprepared, they must be willing to repeat high school courses in
college, spending the extra time, money, and effort in non-credit, remedial
courses.
-
All students can attend college, but low-achieving students
should be warned about remedial courses and their own unlikely prospects for
graduation.
-
College completion, as opposed to enrollment, requires
increased high school effort. If students delay their academic effort until
they get to college, the delay will make degree completion take longer, cost
more, and be less likely.
-
Policies to improve students’ preparation for college do not
remove a school’s obligation to provide students with information about
their college prospects.
-
Students whose college prospects are dim should be provided
good information about alternatives to college that can lead to a successful
employment life. These students can also be informed about opportunities to
attend college later in life.
School staff could play a critical role in providing
information and resources to help students make choices that will support
their own long-term goals before it is too late. Unfortunately, it seems
that students are not getting this information, nor is there a clear mandate
for high school counselors or teachers (or, for that matter, administrators)
to give this advice. How could a better job be done in this area?
-
High schools should monitor and publicize the academic
preparation and college completion rates of their college-bound graduates.
It is common practice for high schools to trumpet the percentage of kids
they send on to college--as if this were the major indicator of a high
school’s success. Instead of focusing on just the number of seniors who go
to college, high school administrators should monitor their graduates’
preparation for college-credit classes (through, for example, achievement
test scores and success in the first year of college) and brag about that:
College preparation, not college attendance, is the real achievement. They
should also inform students about degree completion rates for prior
graduates (by showing the percentage of students who earn college degrees
broken down by grade point average, for example). In addition, high schools
should provide information about various local colleges, including
degree-completion rates and the average number of years students took to
complete their degrees.
-
High schools should require students aiming for college to
take modified college placement exams. Society needs to give students clear
information about the achievement prerequisites for college courses. Since
colleges already give tests to assess whether incoming freshmen are assigned
to credit or remedial classes, one solution is relatively straightforward:
These tests could be modified and given to high school students to tell them
whether they are ready for college-level work. If colleges do not
want to prepare a new test, they could recommend an existing one or simply
give high schools the previous year’s freshman placement exams. These exams
could be given to high school seniors, and a modified exam could be given to
high school sophomores, to tell them whether they are making satisfactory
progress toward college. If not, students must improve their achievement,
revise their goals, or accept the fact that they will have to take remedial
courses in college.
Having high school students take college placement exams may appear
unnecessary since more and more states are developing high school exit
exams. But in many states the high school exit exams were developed to
assess minimum competence. So every year many students pass a high school
exit exam, but then do poorly on a college placement exam and end up in
remedial courses. According to a recent study that compared 66 state high
school exams (35 in English and 31 in mathematics) to a set of standards for
university success found that just three of them (all in English) could
offer useful information about students’ preparation for college (Conley,
2003).
In 2000, Kentucky became the first state in the nation to pass a state law
creating an online mathematics assessment developed specifically to let high
school sophomores and juniors know if they are ready for college-level
algebra and calculus. Called the Kentucky Early Mathematics Testing Program
(KEMTP), the test assesses Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II and was
developed by high school and college mathematics teachers from Kentucky.
This purely diagnostic assessment does not become part of the high school
transcript and is not used for admissions to college; it does give students
(and their schools) immediate feedback on which topics they have--and have
not--mastered and urges students to use the one to two years they have left
in high school to address those weaknesses. (To learn more about KEMTP, go
to
www.mathclass.org/welcome-kemtp.htm.)
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High schools should clear up the misconceptions. Counselors
are the front line here, and they’ll need a lot of support. All school
personnel should be well-armed with the facts and encouraged to convey them
to students. And the facts are clear: High school performance matters. Hard
work in high school matters. Doing homework matters. Taking rigorous courses
matters. Getting good grades matters. All of these are closely connected to
whether students succeed in college. (And, interestingly, they’re also
closely connected to whether non-college bound students succeed in their
jobs.) High schools should also make sure students are well informed about
college remedial courses, specifically: These are the courses they will be
enrolled in if their high school work is not up to snuff; these courses do
not bear college credit; taking them amounts to paying for an education that
could have been had for free in high school; and students who have to take
several of them almost never reach college graduation. (The sidebar,
What You Need To Do in High School If You Want To
Graduate from College, is a student-friendly fact sheet on the
importance of high school achievement for college.)
-
High schools should serve college- and work-bound students
equally well. Teachers, counselors, and administrators dream of students
working hard, doing well in school, and graduating from college. It is a
wonderful dream--but that doesn’t mean it is in every student’s best
interest. Those who haven’t done well academically and those whose interests
are not in the liberal arts are best served with an honest look at their
current chances in college and a serious examination of the alternatives,
such as training opportunities and job placement assistance. The fact is,
despite the economy’s growing preference for college degrees, there are many
good jobs available to high school graduates. (For more information on the
importance of high school for the non-college bound, see the sidebar
All Good Jobs Don't Require a College
Degree....) Postponing college is also a viable option. Many students
enter college when they are older, often after several years of work. More
than half of the students in two-year colleges are older than 24, and about
one-quarter of them are over 35 (NCES 1999). Their age and employment may
give them the experience to make better course choices, the maturity to be
more disciplined students, skills that will help them pass some courses, and
perhaps even employer-paid tuition benefits.
Too often, we think students’ problems are inside of them,
and we blame students’ poor motivation. However, most students tend to be
motivated if they see incentives for effort. But in the case of high school
performance, we obscure what is at stake for most students. While top
quartile students (those aiming for highly selective colleges) are told the
incentives for better grades and test scores, the vast majority of students
get the impression that high school achievement, grades, and test scores are
irrelevant.
Students must realize that high school grades are important: Grades strongly
predict future careers. There are strong incentives for school effort and
students can improve their adult attainments by improving their high school
grades. Although most colleges are not selective--and most unselective
colleges (and most employers) ignore grades in selecting applicants--even
unselective colleges and employers discover that youths with better high
school grades are more successful in attaining college degrees and higher
earnings.
The American educational system has taken a bold step in
making college accessible to so many students. However, the revolution is
still incomplete, and research has identified a number of difficulties in
educators’, parents’, and students’ understandings of college and what it
requires. This revolution poses new challenges and a set of unintended
consequences. We will need thoughtful solutions to address them.
James E. Rosenbaum is professor of sociology, education, and
social policy at Northwestern University and a faculty fellow with the
university's Institute for Policy Research. He is author of Beyond
College for All: Career Paths for the Forgotten Half and
Crossing the Class and Color Lines: From Public Housing to White Suburbia.
* Grade point average is the
easiest-to-use predictor of college success. Research by Clifford Adelman
(1999), however, shows that the intensity and quality of one's high school
curriculum is actually an even more powerful predictor. But since course
content and teacher expectations vary widely from school to school, making
use of this indicator can be difficult. Nonetheless, the gist of both
Adelman's and my research is clear: College-bound students should take the
most difficult courses possible and work hard to earn the highest grades
possible. To read more about Adelman's findings, see
High School Preparation Is the Best Predictor of
College Graduation.
References
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patterns, and bachelor’s degree attainment. Washington, D.C.: U.S.
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Adelman, C. (2004). Principal Indicators of Student Academic Histories in
Postsecondary Education, 1972-2000. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of
Education.
American Diploma Project (2004). Ready or Not: Creating a High School
Diploma That Counts. Washington, D.C.: Achieve, Inc., The Education Trust
and the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation.
Boesel, D. (2001). The college movement and its critics. Phi Delta Kappan,
82, 537-542.
Carnevale, A. and Desrochers, D. (2002). "The missing middle: aligning
education and the knowledge economy." Office of vocational and adult
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Conley, D. (2003). Mixed messages: What state high school tests communicate
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Gray, K. (1996). The baccalaureate game: Is it right for all teens? Phi
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Grubb, W. N. (1996). Working in the middle. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
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