Help Wanted: Return on Investment

Community and Economic Development, Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor

Help Wanted: Return on Investment

Strategic investments of $12 million annually for the next seven years in adult workforce literacy programs would produce $370 million in taxes and savings. How? Read on to find out.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (Northeastern)-Pennsylvania-Philadelphia County-Philadelphia

Help Wanted: Adult Literacy Program Success Stories

Community and Economic Development, Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor

Help Wanted: Adult Literacy Program Success Stories

This one-page document shares fascinating stories of individuals who have benefited from adult workforce literacy programs.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (Northeastern)-Pennsylvania-Philadelphia County-Philadelphia

Help Wanted: Fact Sheet

Community and Economic Development, Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor

Help Wanted: Fact Sheet

This fact sheet, designed to accompany the report Help Wanted: Knowledge Workers Needed, provides highlights of the adult workforce literacy challenge Philadelphia is facing and the role the community can play in developing solutions.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (Northeastern)-Pennsylvania-Philadelphia County-Philadelphia

Help Wanted: Policy Brief

Community and Economic Development, Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor

Help Wanted: Policy Brief

In today's economy, strong basic skills and success in the workforce are intertwined. Employers across all industries demand a new kind of worker, and businesses can go virtually anywhere to find the right employees. In order to compete in today's global economy, Philadelphia must commit to becoming a city with a world-class, highly literate workforce. This policy brief, written in response to the publication Help Wanted: Knowledge Workers Needed, proposes strategies for uniting the full community to advance adult workforce literacy levels. Many of the strategies described in this policy brief are also applicable to areas throughout the country facing this same challenge.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (Northeastern)-Pennsylvania-Philadelphia County-Philadelphia

Help Wanted: Knowledge Workers Needed

Community and Economic Development, Education and Literacy, Employment and Labor

Help Wanted: Knowledge Workers Needed

550,000 ADULTS. 210,000 JOBS. AN ECONOMY IN JEOPARDY. Learn how YOU can be a part of the solution. In June 2009, the Philadelphia Workforce Investment Board published Help Wanted: Knowledge Workers Needed. This publication, containing original research, demonstrates the growing gap between the essential needs of our business and the fundamental skills of our people. While the data behind this report is specific to the Philadelphia region, the need to prepare our citizens with the skills, knowledge, and abilities necessary to compete in our global economy is becoming increasingly important everywhere. In twelve artistic pages (and 3 charts), learn how we can connect our residents to jobs with benefits and advancement opportunities and provide our employers with workers that fuel prosperity and productivity.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America-United States (Northeastern)-Pennsylvania-Philadelphia County-Philadelphia

White Paper: College Access and Retention of Career and Technical Education Graduates

Children and Youth;Education and Literacy;Employment and Labor

White Paper: College Access and Retention of Career and Technical Education Graduates

This White Paper on post secondary access and persistence of career and technical education (CTE) graduates, particularly those with disabilities, is produced in collaboration with the Center for Labor and Market Studies at Northeastern University. Currently, little is known about the actual post secondary enrollment of graduates from Massachusetts public high schools and less is known about the post secondary outcomes of the subset of high school graduates with disabilities. Yet, the labor market environment that these young adults will enter is one characterized by a large and growing lifetime earnings advantage to earning a college degree. The findings are based on data about nearly 4,600 high school students from the Classes of 2004 through 2006 who graduated from seven vocational-technical high schools in Massachusetts.

August 1970

Geographic Focus:

Alternative High School Math Pathways in Massachusetts: Developing an On-Ramp to Minimize College Remediation in Mathematics

Children and Youth;Education and Literacy

Alternative High School Math Pathways in Massachusetts: Developing an On-Ramp to Minimize College Remediation in Mathematics

Of the Massachusetts graduates from the Class of 2005 who enrolled in public colleges, an appalling 29 percent enrolled in a developmental (remedial) math course during the fall semester. Nationally, 63 percent of college students who remediate in mathematics do not earn a 2- or 4-year degree. At a time when a college degree is one of the critical components of one's ability to afford a home and support a family, that such high rates of Massachusetts' high school graduates require remediation in math is cause for alarm - and action. The Rennie Center for Education Research and Policy has produced a policy brief that proposes a new pathway in high school mathematics aimed at eliminating the need for college remediation in math.

The policy brief, entitled Alternative High School Math Pathways in Massachusetts: Developing an On-Ramp to Minimize College Remediation in Mathematics, proposes a plan designed to significantly reduce, and ultimately, eliminate the number of students who require college remediation in mathematics.

Rather than the traditional progression of math courses (Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II, Calculus), we propose three new math courses at the middle and high school levels - including a new fourth year math course titled: Topics in Applied Mathematics for College Preparation that would provide an alternative to Pre-calculus/Calculus for students pursuing non-math related majors. We recommend that Massachusetts policymakers and school and district leaders should take the following steps toward establishing to a well-aligned, effective system that ensures all students are ready for college-level mathematics:

  • Ensure mastery of arithmetic by the end of seventh grade;
  • Focus on mastery and application of algebraic concepts;
  • Offer the ACCUPLACER(R) test to high school juniors;
  • Provide guidance based on the Elementary Algebra ACCUPLACER(R) score; and
  • Encourage all students to take mathematics during their first college semester.

August 1970

Geographic Focus: North America / United States (New England)

Meeting the Challenge: Promising Practices for Reducing the Dropout Rate in Massachusetts Schools and Districts

Children and Youth;Education and Literacy;Employment and Labor

Meeting the Challenge: Promising Practices for Reducing the Dropout Rate in Massachusetts Schools and Districts

One in five Massachusetts students does not graduate from high school in four years. At a time when a high school diploma is essential to ensuring future success, such large numbers of students struggling to earn a diploma is cause for concern. Yet, there are Massachusetts schools and districts making progress; a review of district data over the past four years revealed that several districts and schools throughout the Commonwealth are steadily reducing their dropout rates. The Rennie Center's latest policy brief, Meeting the Challenge: Promising Practices for Reducing the Dropout Rate in Massachusetts Schools and Districts analyzes practices and policies within these schools and districts to help inform the work of educators and policymakers and to address the question: "In schools that are reducing their dropout rates, what is working?"

The Rennie Center's research is based on interviews with district leaders and principals from 11 high schools in 9 Massachusetts districts that have reduced their student dropout rates over the past four years. Through these interviews, several themes emerged. Nearly all of these districts and schools: 1) used data to identify students at-risk of dropping out (including early indicators of potential dropouts and high school attendance); 2) offered targeted interventions such as personalizing the learning environment and supporting the transition to ninth grade; 3) connected high school to college and careers; 4) provided alternatives to traditional high school; and 5) formed collaborations and partnerships to bring in additional resources for students at-risk of dropping out.

Considerations Based On Findings

The Importance of Leadership - All of the schools studied in this policy brief had leaders who initiated and sustained a focus on students at-risk of dropping out. These leaders placed a high value on struggling students and emphasized the needs of these students with their entire faculty so that adults in the school felt a sense of ownership for the outcomes of these students.

No Silver Bullets - Students at-risk of dropping out have varied needs and the schools studied in this brief provided a correspondingly diverse set of interventions and supports to address students' behavioral/emotional and academic needs.

Persistent Effort Over Time - It is important to note that for the schools that participated in this study, there have been no quick fixes. The success of these schools' efforts has been dependent on a sustained focus on the needs of these learners and a steadfast commitment of resources over time.

More Than Academics - Rather than focusing exclusively on providing academic supports for students at-risk of dropping out, the schools studied in this brief combined academic support with initiatives to foster students' increased engagement in school.

Follow-Up with Dropouts - Most of the schools did not follow up with students once they had dropped out - either to find out why they had dropped out, or to encourage them to return to some course of study that would lead to a diploma. This is an area that warrants future attention.

The policy brief was the subject of discussion at a public event on February 12, 2009. For more information about the dropout crisis in Massachusetts, visit: www.projectdropout.org.

August 1970

Geographic Focus:

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