NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Siguen las disparidades entre las líneas racial y socioeconómica cuando se trata de quién tiende más a abandonar el "College", de acuerdo a nuevos estudios circulados por el Departamento de Educación (U.S. Department of Education) de los Estados Unidos.
Tennessee forma parte de un grupo de estados que usan datos relativos a la educación superior estatal para implementar programas enfocados a ayudar a que los estudiantes obtengan su grado académico.
Nuevos indicadores federales muestran que el alumnado adulto, los estudiantes de color y los veteranos tienen muchas menos posibilidades que otros grupos de terminar sus estudios de "College", y los funcionarios educativos del estado dicen que ahora usan un enfoque a base de datos para crear programas específicos enfocados en evitar que deserten los estudiantes que estén en riesgo de abandonar los estudios.
La Directora Ejecutiva Adjunta ("Deputy Executive Director") de la Comisión de Educación Superior de Tennessee, Emily House, dice que Tennessee está trabajando para recabar información sobre cuáles estudiantes necesitan ayuda, las razones por las que se les dificulta, y encontrar rutas alternas para apoyarles.
En dos estudios nuevos que siguieron el rastro de estudiantes entre 2011 y 2017, los investigadores sólo encontraron que aproximadamente una cuarta parte de los estudiantes Hispanos y Negros habían conseguido su título de bachiller para 2017, comparado con más del 50 por ciento de estudiantes asiáticos y 43 por ciento de estudiantes blancos.
"Ayudar verdaderamente a que las instituciones usen sus datos, a que se enfoquen en sus datos, ver dónde está esa ausencia de logros y luego cuál es la intervención más apropiada para los estudiantes en ese campus. Y puede estar entre un programa puente de verano y un programa de tutoría, hasta una biblioteca que preste títulos de tecnología."
Comenta que hace dos años Tennessee implementó "Reconnect," un programa para adultos que regresan a la escuela. Los estudiantes forman una mancuerna con un miembro de la comunidad conocido como navegador, para ayudarle a enfrentar retos desde la inscripción hasta la titulación.
House agrega que los estudiantes adultos que trabajan con un "navegador" "Reconnect" tienen más posibilidades de persistir de un semestre al otro, que un aprendiz adulto que no trabaje así.
Muchos de los recursos de los que dependen los alumnos adultos también han beneficiado a los estudiantes veteranos del estado. House dice que la Comisión tiene un proceso para determinar cuáles instituciones son buenas para las veteranas y los veteranos.
"Los cursos que se ofrecen, los créditos obtenidos por aprendizajes previos, por servicios prestados y la 'T-HEC' (Comisión de Educación Superior de Tennessee / 'Tennessee Higher Education Commission') les da como un sello de aprobación diciendo que son campus amigables con los veteranos."
El estudio del Departamento de Educación de los Estados Unidos (U.S. Department of Education) encontró que los veteranos tenían la mitad de posibilidades de haber obtenido un grado de Bachiller como no veteranos dentro de un lapso de seis años.
House agrega que los administradores muy posiblemente tengan que extender recursos para los adultos que lo necesitan más durante la pandemia. Y que los "colleges" de Tennessee ya están viendo cambios en la inscripción.
"Algunas instituciones están diciendo que mucha gente eligió no inscribirse y su matrícula está muy baja. Esto es interesante por la recesión económica. Típicamente, cuando vemos una recesión, la inscripción de la educación superior estalla. Al menos a nivel anecdótico, hasta ahora no es lo que estamos oyendo."
El estudio longitudinal encontró también que los estudiantes que iniciaron "college" más de un año después de haberse graduado de "High School" tenían la cuarta parte de posibilidades de obtener un grado de bachiller ("Bachelor") en 6 años.
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A new Gallup and Lumina Foundation poll unveils a concerning reality: Hoosiers may lack clarity about the true cost of higher education.
The survey reveals merely 23% of U.S. adults without college degrees could estimate the annual net cost of a bachelor's degree from a public college within $5,000 of the actual expense. The repercussions of the financial fog can be overwhelming for students.
Gabriela Espinoza, a 27-year-old nursing student at IUPUI in Indianapolis, said looming debt from school casts a shadow over her future.
"I'm trying to figure out what my debt is going to look like and how long it's going to take me to pay off," Espinoza explained. "I'm luckily in a position right now where I live at home with mom, and she's been helping me out. You know, eventually, I'd like to think about moving out and moving on my own."
Among those polled, 75% believe a bachelor's degree is "extremely" or "very" valuable. However, cost is a major deterrent for many who wish to get a degree. Experts say higher education leaders need to bring clarity to the true cost of college to reduce confusion and provide a pathway for the millions of Americans who have considered college but have not yet enrolled.
For those participating in the poll, 31% have considered stopping coursework within the last three months due to the cost of attending college.
Parker Madison, another nursing student at IUPUI, said the expense is a major concern.
"If you get your college education, you still may be making the same amount as someone without a degree," Madison pointed out. "I feel like sometimes the college education's not even worth it."
More than half, about 56%, of unenrolled adults said cost is a very important reason they are not pursuing a post-high school education. Debt is also a factor for students who stopped out of college, with 35% of students saying loans prevented them from returning to finishing their degree.
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Educators and public school advocates are pushing back on a measure which would consolidate state-funded services that have been an important part of schools in rural Iowa for generations. Some state lawmakers said the funding could be used more efficiently.
Area Education Agencies have been the go-to place for educators in rural Iowa when they need state services at the local level, in all 99 Iowa counties. House Bill 2612 would consolidate the agencies, outsource some of their services and give the state oversight of them.
Mike Owen, deputy director of the group Common Good Iowa, said the agencies have been critical resources for generations.
"The Area Education Agencies have been a very valuable regional system that helps school districts, large and small, with various services that they can't really do on their own," Owen explained. "From special education to media services, to professional development of teachers."
Gov. Kim Reynolds, who signed the measure, said it will provide a more efficient way to spend the state's education dollars. It is scheduled to take effect July 1.
The battle over public school funding has been playing out on a variety of fronts in Iowa, which enjoys a reputation for some of the best-quality public education in the nation. The state recently enacted a private school voucher program, paid for with state dollars.
Owen sees consolidating the Area Education Agencies and outsourcing some of the services they provide as another step in the wrong direction for Iowa's K-12 classrooms.
"It's total disrespect to locally elected decision-makers for schools," Owen contended. "One more example of how education, unfortunately, is being used to pit people against one another, when it is really a unifying value for Iowans."
There are nine Area Education Agencies in Iowa. The State Department of Education will assume oversight of all of them.
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The solar eclipse has sparked more interest in science and technology, especially among young people.
But the saying, 'You can't be what you don't see,' is a reality for youth of color considering a Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math career.
A 2024 Black Girls and STEM Report indicates this demographic aspires to become astronauts, engineers and more -- but a lack of Black representation can dampen their enthusiasm.
Crystal Morton is the founder and director of the Girls STEM Institute, which offers courses for girls ages 7 to 18.
She said the emphasis is on relevant cultural content and careers for girls who might not otherwise have access to these experiences.
"That might be doing a session on the science of Black hair," said Morton, "looking at different products to understand the science behind how that product is made, and what's in that product or how it may be impacting them. So, we make our own products. You can be able to look at a label and say, 'Hey, I should be able to pronounce what I'm putting on my skin, or in my hair.'"
She said the students quickly get the connections.
The National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics says about one-third of STEM workers are women. But Black workers make up only 18% of the 35 million people employed in STEM fields.
Morton said the Institute's Saturday programs are in partnership with the Indiana University, Indianapolis School of Education. And in the summer, volunteers engage with students about careers in aviation and medicine.
As a former math teacher, Morton said she believes early exposure to this information is key, and said kids begin showing their curiosity as early as third grade.
"Understanding how things happen with technology, that they all need to have different mathematical levels of understanding," said Morton. "They need to have computational thinking skills, because that's the way this world is moving. And I believe that they do have it -- if you just sit back and watch them play, you see the problem solving happen."
A report on Indiana's STEM education priorities shows the number of undergraduate degrees is up since 2015, but the number of STEM-related degrees awarded hasn't moved much.
Hispanic and Black students earn between 3% and 5% of those STEM degrees. They make up 6% and 9% of the state's population, respectively.
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