Project Aims to Dispel 'Misguided Notions and Outdated Assumptions' about College Readiness
        Policymakers and education leaders are often working with "misguided" ideas about student success and college readiness, and researchers at the University of Chicago are looking to do something about that.
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 02/14/17
 
 
The myth  is this: that a student's academic trajectory is set for college — or not — by  the time he or she enters high school. The reality is this: Course performance  in grade 9 is more predictive of a student's chances of graduating high school  than all other factors — race, gender, socioeconomic status and prior academic  achievement — combined.
Another  myth is this one: ACT and SAT scores are the most important indicator of success  in college. While ACT and SAT scores do matter for college access, grade point  averages are much more predictive of college success. In fact, strong  grades — earning As and Bs in high school — are the strongest indicator of  college readiness and are much more predictive of college graduation than any  test score.
Those are  two of the myths tackled in a project undertaken by two research groups at the University  of Chicago, which  hopes to dispel "misguided notions and outdated assumptions" about  how to help students succeed in getting through high school and college. The To&Through  Project is a  partnership undertaken by the university's Urban  Education Institute,  which has conducted years of research on Chicago public schools to understand  what is relevant in school improvement and student success; and the Network  for College Success,  which designs and provides training and support to help schools build capacity  in using research and data to improve student outcomes.
The "Mythbusters"  project examines 10 myths against a decade's worth of research and data from  the U Chicago Consortium on School Research and provide links to the relevant  research.
Academic  trajectory, for example, is better determined by looking at whether freshmen are  "on-track" in the ninth grade — earning five full-year credits and no  more than one semester F in a core class. They're nearly four times more likely  than their off-track peers to graduate from high school, the researchers  reported. The main driver of course failure is absences: Course attendance is  eight times more predictive of course failure in the freshman year than  eighth-grade test scores.
Likewise,  students with ACT scores between 21 and 23 have about a 50 percent chance of graduating  college if their high school GPA is between 2.5 and 2.9. Yet students with ACT scores  in the same range but with GPAs between 3.0 and 3.4 graduate from college at rates  of nearly 70 percent.
Another  prevalent myth: Students with the will to go to college will figure out a way  to get there. The reality: Nationwide, while 80 percent of high school students  aspire to earn a bachelor's degree, only 44 percent enroll immediately in a four-year  college. The obstacles that hold the others back: navigating a complex financial  aid application process and figuring out how to target their applications to schools  that are a good match for their qualifications and have high graduation rates.
The full  compilation of myths is available on the To&Through Project website here.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.