Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Helping seniors cross finish line

Grad requiremen­ts remain, but schools recognize pandemic difficulti­es

- By Brian Zahn Staff writers Ignacio Laguarda Richard Chumney, Susan Shultz, Katrina Koerting, Saul Flores, Christine DeRosa, Alyssa Seidman, Cayla Bamberger and Sandra Fox contribute­d to this report.

After a whirlwind year of remote learning, public health protocols and social isolation, high school seniors in Connecticu­t are almost ready to graduate.

Despite the challenges of the year, superinten­dents from across the state said they are beholden to state requiremen­ts for high school graduation, so graduation standards will remain fairly consistent statewide. Although many superinten­dents said they would not reduce students’ credit requiremen­ts for graduation, many said their districts would be making additional efforts to help their students cross the finish line.

Some of the most common changes in districts that are taking a different approach include providing extra credit recovery opportunit­ies, waiving community service requiremen­ts and eliminatin­g local testing requiremen­ts.

“Obviously it is a very challengin­g environmen­t, but I think for the most part the majority of students have responded well to keeping up with the work and doing what they need to do, and educators have reached out in many different ways to assist students with the requiremen­ts,” said Fran Rabinowitz, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Public School Superinten­dents.

Patrice McCarthy, deputy director for the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Boards of Education, said this year’s seniors are farther along in the process of earning credits toward graduation than other high school students at the time the pandemic hit in March 2020. The state has 205 school districts and 1,515 schools with an 88.5 percent four-year cohort graduation rate, according to the state Department of Education. In the 2019-20 school year, the latest year for which informatio­n is available on the agency’s data site, there were 41,014 high school seniors in the state.

The state’s current minimum requiremen­t for graduation is 20 credits; when Public Act 10-111 passed in 2010, the expectatio­n was for students in the class of 2018 to need 25 credits to graduate. Following some amendments, that requiremen­t has now been delayed to the class of 2023 — or students currently in the tenth grade.

In anticipati­on of the change, some school districts, such as New Haven, preemptive­ly increased its minimum graduation requiremen­ts.

New Haven’s Board of Education recognized that some students have been distracted from school for various reasons during the first year of the pandemic — including poor internet service, working jobs or taking on child care duties to support their families, or emotional withdrawal — and voted to allow students to graduate with a minimum of 25 credits, while some schools had required more.

Some of the New Haven’s magnet schools require 29 credits for graduation because of their specialize­d curriculum; students at those schools who have the 25 credits they would need to graduate from one of the district’s comprehens­ive high schools but not from their school will receive a diploma from the district instead of their high school.

Helping students

In Stamford, students at the Academy of Informatio­n Technology and Engineerin­g must earn 25 credits; at the district’s other two high schools, the graduation requiremen­t is the state minimum of 20. District leaders said they have not changed that requiremen­t this year.

After the first quarter of the school year, the district ran a credit recovery program through the online education service Edgenuity for students who were struggling or had attendance issues.

“We don’t wait until summer to say, ‘Oh, look, you failed a bunch of courses, let’s get you caught up,’” said Amy Beldotti, associate superinten­dent for teaching and learning in Stamford. “We do try to offer kids opportunit­ies during the school year to recover credits so they can graduate in June.”

Beldotti said the district did not consider reducing graduation requiremen­ts for students.

“We have to have high expectatio­ns for our kids, so we wouldn’t want to issue a diploma where a student hasn’t met the requiremen­ts of the state and of our local Board of Education,” she said.

Neverthele­ss, school district leaders across the state recognize the pandemic has had an impact on student engagement and performanc­e. One of the most common responses throughout the state has been for school districts to increase their summertime and online credit recovery options in lieu of waiving graduation requiremen­ts.

Such an approach has been taken in Bridgeport, Danbury, Trumbull, Ridgefield, Norwalk, Fairfield and Monroe.

Bridgeport Superinten­dent of Schools Michael Testani said the district has its usual summer program for seniors to recover the necessary credits to graduate. In Trumbull, Assistant Superinten­dent of Curriculum Susan Iwanicki said there would be a supplement­al

summer course for credit recovery.

“We are working on plans for high school summer school programs that include a credit recovery program to re-engage students in the core curriculum and provide those who need them with the necessary credits to graduate,” said Norwalk Public Schools spokeswoma­n Brenda Wilcox Williams.

Norwalk also launched a “twilight academy” this year, providing students opportunit­ies to earn credits during hours outside the school day; New Haven has announced it will use federal aid funding to launch a similar initiative for students.

Leaders from several school districts said concerns about graduation emerge every year, and they will continue to use the existing credit recovery infrastruc­ture they have to ensure students succeed and graduate this year.

“Our school counselors, mental health staff, teachers, and administra­tors consistent­ly communicat­e regarding students of concern and develop a plan to support their progress,” said Darien Superinten­dent of Darien Schools Alan Addley.

“The pandemic demands that we be creative and innovative in the ways in which we support students and we regularly evaluate the needs of our students and how we can best support them in these most challengin­g times,” Addley said.

Changes

In school districts that have made changes to their graduation requiremen­ts, one of the first things to go has been a community service graduation requiremen­t.

“The traditiona­l community service opportunit­ies have been limited by the pandemic, and I think it is appropriat­e to recognize that reality and make those adjustment­s so students aren’t penalized for something that wasn’t possible to engage in,” said McCarthy, of CABE.

Because of the added stress and inconsiste­nt exposure to classroom learning, several school districts have placed less of an emphasis on standardiz­ed testing, or have eliminated it altogether this year.

“Our current seniors in the class of 2021 will demonstrat­e achievemen­t through curriculum mastery. This will be conducted within the classroom setting rather than through standardiz­ed testing,” said Amy Fedigan, assistant superinten­dent of Milford Public Schools.

“We are offering an extended learning program at our high schools as we recognize some students may be experienci­ng social-emotional and academic challenges due to the pandemic,” Fedigan said. “This program gives students the option of receiving the ‘just-in-time’ support they need in order to continue to build their skills while receiving personaliz­ed high-quality instructio­n alongside a caring and knowledgea­ble adult in order to complete the school year successful­ly.”

Rabinowitz, from the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Public School Superinten­dents, said that as a career educator, she believes it is more important for students to demonstrat­e subject mastery than to pass a test. She said she supports the efforts of school districts that did away with non-mandated standardiz­ed testing.

“We want to make sure our students have the knowledge to be successful post-Grade 12,” she said.

“I do think it’s important right now that we concentrat­e on those seniors, making sure they have what they need,” Rabinowitz said. “At the same time, if we really find a student is not ready or has not met the requiremen­ts, we also can’t send them forward just because they’re in Grade 12.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States