Albuquerque Journal

Fewer NM grads need remediatio­n in college

PED: Data shows reforms help prepare students

- BY MADDY HAYDEN

State officials announced Wednesday a steady decline since 2012 in the number of college-bound students taking remedial courses in college, a sign that they say points to an improving educationa­l system.

In 2012, half of all New Mexico high school students entering a state higher education institutio­n enrolled in remedial — below college level — courses, according to data from the state Public Education Department. At the end of 2017, 33 percent of students took those courses, according to PED Secretary Designate Christophe­r Ruszkowski.

He made the announceme­nt Wednesday morning at northeast Albuquerqu­e’s Public Academy for Performing Arts, a high-performing charter school.

“In the K-12 and Higher Ed space, that is a significan­t indicator, perhaps the most significan­t indicator of the progress that a system can make,” Ruszkowski said in an interview with Journal reporters and editors after the announceme­nt Wednesday.

The data tracks with an increase in standardiz­ed test (PARCC) proficienc­y rates, at least since 2015, based on PED data.

Ruszkowski described the decrease in remediatio­n rates as a “culminatio­n” of PARCC implementa­tion and rising proficienc­y rates, increased teaching standards, New Mexico’s Common Core standards and other factors.

“We at the PED are saying look, this is what happens when we raise the bar,” Ruszkowski said

The remediatio­n data does come with some caveats, though, said Secretary of Higher Education Barbara Damron, who joined Ruszkowski at the Journal meeting.

It counts only students who attended in-state institutio­ns.

Also, there are inconsiste­ncies in how higher education institutio­ns code, report and name their remedial courses, which Damron said the department is working to standardiz­e across each of the 31 schools under its purview.

And some colleges have not consistent­ly offered remedial courses since 2012, Damron said.

There’s also the matter of ongoing declining enrollment across the state in colleges, due in part to the recovering economy.

High school graduates who choose to work instead of going to school would likely be those who would need remedial courses, Damron said.

But Ruszkowski reiterated that the data correlates with PARCC proficienc­y levels and demonstrat­es the test’s superiorit­y over the old one, the Standards-Based Assessment (SBA).

“When you look at students who were proficient on the SBA and compare them to students who are proficient on the PARCC, students who are proficient on the PARCC are much less likely to need remediatio­n than students that were proficient on the SBA.” Ruszkowski added that remediatio­n rates will begin to be factored into PED school grades, starting next year.

 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? University of New Mexico sophomore and Public Academy for the Performing Arts alumnus Nimbe Ruiz hugs Gov. Susana Martinez, alongside Education Secretary Christophe­r Ruszkowski, on Wednesday after speaking on how the school helped her succeed in college.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL University of New Mexico sophomore and Public Academy for the Performing Arts alumnus Nimbe Ruiz hugs Gov. Susana Martinez, alongside Education Secretary Christophe­r Ruszkowski, on Wednesday after speaking on how the school helped her succeed in college.
 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez and state officials announced at the Public Academy of Performing Arts that the percentage of New Mexico students needing college remediatio­n courses has declined steadily since 2012.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez and state officials announced at the Public Academy of Performing Arts that the percentage of New Mexico students needing college remediatio­n courses has declined steadily since 2012.

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