The Mercury News

California needs more college grads, falls short on preparatio­n

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CALmatters columnist.

The fundamenta­l mission of a K-12 school system should be to have as many students as humanely possible graduate from high school with the fundamenta­l skills they need to succeed as adults.

California’s high school graduation rates, once abysmally low, have improved somewhat in recent years, although the factors in that improvemen­t are a little cloudy. It’s unclear whether kids are being better educated and thus are more capable of meeting graduation requiremen­ts or the requiremen­ts themselves have been dumbed-down.

It’s noteworthy that the Legislatur­e has eliminated the high school exit examinatio­n. It tested the essential knowledge and skills 12 years of education were to have provided. Passage was required before a diploma could be awarded, but the exam was criticized for blocking too many students, particular­ly poor, Latino and black students, from graduation.

We also know that too many of the state’s high school graduates entering college — 40 percent of enrollees in the California State University system, for instance — have been required to take remedial English and math courses because their high school instructio­n fell short.

Faced with that dilemma, CSU is eliminatin­g such courses and folding remediatio­n into courses required for graduation, a policy aimed at increasing college graduation rates but one that could mask, rather than solve, high schools’ failures.

A recent report from the Public Policy Institute of California points out that even without an exit exam, California’s high school graduation requiremen­ts, in terms of academic courses taken and passed, are among the nation’s lowest and are also significan­tly lower than what CSU and the University of California require for admission.

A concurrent PPIC report underscore­s the failure of the state’s school systems to produce enough graduates prepared to succeed in college and thus fill the state’s needs.

“Far too many California students are falling off the pathway to and through college,” the PPIC study concludes. “At current rates of high school and college completion, only about 30 percent of California ninthgrade­rs will earn a bachelor’s degree, a rate that is insufficie­nt for an economy that increasing­ly demands more highly educated workers.”

The report points out that most California high school graduates do not complete the courses required for college admission, and “even academical­ly prepared students are falling off the pathway” by starting, but not completing, the required courses, with black and Latino students particular­ly “likely to drop off the pathway at every stage.”

Finally, CSU does not have the capacity to enroll and educate those students who have completed admission requiremen­ts, PPIC said.

California’s shortcomin­gs in preparing students for and later delivering successful higher education will bite a state whose economy, as PPIC said, increasing­ly needs highly educated workers.

No, not every California­n needs a four-year college degree. And society needs lots of skilled workers without college diplomas to produce services and goods and maintain our machinery, from cars to power plants and technology.

However, we do need enough college-educated workers to replace retiring members of the babyboom generation and keep us competitiv­e in a global economy, and we need those graduates to be truly educated, not just shuffled through a system with lowered standards.

 ?? ANDA CHU STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The California State University system is eliminatin­g remedial English and math courses even though 40 percent of CSU enrollees need them.
ANDA CHU STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The California State University system is eliminatin­g remedial English and math courses even though 40 percent of CSU enrollees need them.

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