Report: Students Accepted to College Still Unprepared for Higher Ed
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 02/16/17
 
 
An investigation by the Hechinger  Report has found  that most colleges enroll "many" students who aren't prepared for  higher education. The organization, which does journalism on public education,  found that among 209 two- and four-year colleges across the country, more than  half of incoming students had to take remedial courses in math or English. The  study examined 2014-2015 data from 911 schools in total, almost all of which  accepted students who then required extra help before they were ready to tackle  a "full load of college-level, credit-bearing courses."
The report  stated that remediation rates are difficult to compare among states because  they all use different cutoff scores to decide who must take the classes.  However, according to Hechinger, Maine leads the way with 49 percent of all first-time  students requiring remedial classes, followed by New Jersey, where 46 percent  of students do.
The  percentages are higher for recent high school graduates and at community  colleges. Fifty-nine percent of new graduates in Tennessee needed remedial education;  58 percent of Nevada students did. The report said that "more than  two-thirds" of first-time students enrolling in Arkansas' two-year  colleges required remedial classes in 2014, and about 60 percent of those in  Massachusetts and Tennessee did.
Interestingly,  the same analysis also showed that remediation rates have been dropping in most  states by small amounts, as states have adopted the Common Core standards in  K-12 intended to align what's expected of high school graduates to be  college-ready.
Those  outcomes are problematic for two main reasons: First, it's a "financial  drain" to the tune of $7 billion a year for students, colleges and  taxpayers, the report explained. Second, and more importantly, research has  found that students who take remedial classes often don't move into courses  that lead to earning credits for a degree. Many never bother completing their  remedial programs either.
To counter  the high numbers, colleges are trying several approaches. Several are working  with their local "feeder" school districts to identify people in high  school who aren't ready for college math or English and trying to bring them up  to snuff before graduation, with some measure of success. For example,  Hechinger found that the proportion of students arriving from high school  between 2011 and 2014 who needed remedial instruction dropped from 69 percent  to 59 percent under such efforts.
Another  approach is to try shorter stints of remediation. Baltimore  City Community College,  as one example, shrunk the length of some remedial courses from 16 weeks to 12  or eight. They're also shifting to open educational resources for those classes  to reduce the cost to students of doing remediation.
The same  school is experimenting with just-in-time remediation, in which an instructor  teaches college-level courses and then spends time immediately after the  classes with students who need extra help to focus on problem areas.
While  these kinds of efforts "take considerable time and energy" as well as  more money, administrators are finding the outlay worthwhile. The report quoted  CCBC President Sandra Kurtinitis, who noted, "It's an expense we incur  gladly.... It's really an investment in retaining students who are now prepared  at the college level."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.