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URBAN YOUTH RESEARCHERS REPORT ON NEW
GRADUATION STANDARDS
On Aug. 22, the Urban Youth Research Initiative,
including teams of youth researchers from Newark, Paterson,
and Jersey City, released the findings of a
statewide survey
on New Jerseys new high school graduation requirements.
The survey found strong support for high standards for all
students, but concern about the capacity of schools and districts
to deliver the standards successfully and strong opposition
to using new end-of-course exams to deny diplomas to students
who otherwise meet graduation requirements.
The event was the culmination of a yearlong
project during which youth and adult research teams looked
into the issues raised by the new graduation requirements
adopted by the State Board last June. The plan requires all
students to complete a set of college prep courses, including
advanced math and science courses, and to take new end-of-course
exams currently under development. The program was held at
St. Peters College in Jersey where the students earned
three credits for their work. [For more on the Initiative
see http://www.spc.edu/pages/3081.asp]
About 75 people attended the event, including
parents, educators, advocates, Deputy Education Commissioner
Willa Spicer and State Board President Josephine Hernandez.
Student teams from each city presented their findings and
reflections on the HS redesign plan in poems, spoken word,
personal stories, multimedia projects, and an excellent new
video from the Abbott Leadership Institute's Youth Media Symposium.
Stan Karp of ELC summarized the policy debate that led to
the project. Dr. Michelle Fine of the CUNY Graduate Center
summarized the results of the statewide survey conducted by
the youth researchers, emphasizing three key findings:
- broad support for high standards for
all students
- concern about the uneven capacity of
schools & districts to successfully deliver the new
graduation requirements to all students
- strong opposition to using new end-of-course
exams to deny diplomas to students who otherwise meet graduation
requirements
A lively discussion followed the presentations,
with many speakers stressing the need to include young people
in the policy debates and decision-making around secondary
reform. Deputy Commissioner Spicer and Board President Hernandez
invited the students to bring their research to the NJ Department
of Education and continue the dialogue as implementation of
the new graduation standards goes forward.
The Urban Youth Research Initiative is co-sponsored
by: Abbott Leadership Institute, Education Law Center, CUNY
Graduate Center, NJ Community Development Corporation, Saint
Peters College, Project GRAD, ASPIRA. Funding support
was provided by the Schumann Fund for New Jersey and by family
donations in honor of Bob Ricci, a longtime community advocate
in Jersey City.
The Youth Researchers Report on the Statewide
Survey on the new graduation requirements is also available
at the project website (lower left): http://www.spc.edu/pages/3081.asp
For additional info contact skarp@edlawcenter.org
Prepared: August 25, 2009
Copyright © 2009 Education
Law Center. All Rights Reserved.
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