ea n- The Condition of College Career Readin - 2012 f` Fi origin advancing lives Florida The Condition of College & Career Readiness | Class of 2012 Annually, ACT provides a snapshot of the college and career readiness of ACT-tested high school graduates. We offer this report as a service to inform policymakers and practitioners about selected indicators of effectiveness and how that translates into readiness. In interpreting and using the results, keep in mind that the number and percentage of 2012 graduates who took the ACT in your state determine how representative these findings are for your state. only), regardless of the high school they attend and their level of prior achievement. In fact, students who are monitored early are more likely to meet three or all four of the ACT College Readiness Benchmarks than students who are not monitored early, regardless of gender, race, or annual family income. The ACT groundbreaking research report The Forgotten Middle (ACT 2008) suggests that being on target for college and career readiness by 8th grade puts students on a trajectory for success in high school and beyond. This research shows that the level of academic achievement that students attain by 8th grade has a larger impact on their college and career readiness by the time they graduate from high school than anything that happens academically in high school. This research also reveals that students' academic readiness for college and career can be further supported and improved when they acquire and demonstrate behaviors in the upper elementary grades and in middle school shown to be related to successful academic performance. The problems are clear and very well documented. ACT research strongly supports the need for an integrated, longitudinal, data-driven system to inform and encourage coherence in school, district, and state efforts to prepare all high school graduates for college and career. Our high schools must provide rigorous courses that are aligned with college and career readiness standards, and more students must be prepared and have the opportunity to take these core courses. All students must also have systematic guidance and feedback about their progress, and get that feedback early and often. Our Unique Added Value ACT has been measuring the academic achievement of 11th- and 12th-grade students since 1959, their career aspirations since 1969, and their academic preparation in high school since 1985. ACT's data system includes each of these areas for 8th and 10th graders and has been monitoring student readiness and success for nearly two decades. Since 1996, and every three to five years thereafter, ACT surveys thousands of high school and college educators to pinpoint the knowledge and skills needed for first-year college coursework. ACT is the only organization with decades of empirical data showing exactly what happens to high school graduates once they get to college or to work and how they can maximize success--based on their preparation from kindergarten through high school. College and Career Readiness Defined ACT has long defined college and career readiness as the acquisition of the knowledge and skills a student needs to enroll and succeed in credit-bearing first-year courses at a postsecondary institution (such as a two- or four-year college, trade school, or technical school) without the need for remediation. ACT's definition of college and career readiness was adopted by the Common Core State Standards Initiative, which serves as validation of our extensive research and ACT's College Readiness Standards(TM). Measuring academic performance in the context of college and career readiness--focusing on the numbers and percentages of students meeting or exceeding the ACT College Readiness Benchmarks--provides meaningful and compelling information about the academic readiness of students. The Condition of College & Career Readiness highlights that information. Use of Student Growth Models in Early Monitoring As states and districts implement college and career readiness standards, metrics aligned to those standards are needed to gauge individual and school progress toward this goal. Using these metrics, growth modeling has strong potential to help stakeholders measure progress--for individual students and for school systems. Growth model results can serve a variety of purposes. Educators and policymakers can use growth modeling results as part of accountability systems, to measure student and school improvement, to more accurately diagnose areas of strength and weakness, and to inform educator professional development initiatives. Early monitoring of academic growth toward the college and career readiness goal can help identify problems, so that interventions can be made to get the individual or school system back on track. Early Student Monitoring and Intervention ACT research continues to show the importance of early monitoring of student achievement and appropriate interventions. In the recently released research report Staying on Target (ACT 2012), students who are monitored early before taking the ACT are more likely to be college and career ready than those not monitored early (i.e., who take the ACT (C) 2012 by ACT, Inc. All rights reserved. The ACT(R) is a registered trademark of ACT, Inc., in the USA and other countries. ACT National Curriculum Survey(R), EXPLORE(R), PLAN(R), QualityCore(R), and WorkKeys(R) are registered trademarks of ACT, Inc. College Readiness Standards(TM), ENGAGE(TM), and Core Practice(TM) are trademarks of ACT, Inc. A Comprehensive Framework of Best Practices One compelling reason for undertaking early and continuous monitoring of student performance that includes student growth models and for implementing aligned, outcomesfocused education standards is that there is strong empirical evidence for these educational practices.1 In addition to these, other key practices for increasing readiness can be implemented at the district, school, and classroom levels as part of a comprehensive framework of best practices. The Core Practice(TM) Framework is an example of this. Empirically developed and validated, the Core Practice Framework outlines the evidence-based educator practices at each level of a school system--district, school, and classroom--that will help all students master high standards. The Framework focuses on five themes: 1) Curriculum and Academic Goals, 2) Staff Selection, Leadership, and Capacity Building, 3) Instructional Tools, 4) Monitoring Performance and Progress, and 5) Intervention and Adjustment. Included in the Framework are Critical Actions--steps on how to implement the 15 core practices. Building a System ACT is pleased to announce that we will provide an aligned, coherent system that will now begin in the earlier grades, giving states, districts, and schools a suite of opportunities spanning grades 3-12. This new system is aligned to our College Readiness Standards, which allows monitoring and intervening to take place much earlier and will help to get more students prepared to succeed at college-level work. The system is built on the framework of our College Readiness Standards, essentially pulling these standards down into the lower grades and defining what students need to know and when in order to be on track for college. We have created these standards, and our test blueprints, around the results of the ACT National Curriculum Survey(R). This survey is given every few years to educators in postsecondary, secondary, and now in the elementary grades to determine both what is being taught in the classroom and the expectations of what is needed to succeed at the next level, be it middle school, high school, or college. It is a representative sample of educators from across the country. For the first time, this survey has been enhanced to drill into what is being taught and the specific expectations in the lower grades and how that aligns to success in college. As you may expect, there is a disconnection between what is being taught and the expectations for success at the next level. The ultimate goal of this system is to give educators assessment tools to intervene and get more students on the right track to college and career success. Arguably, this is one of the reasons the Common Core State Standards were developed. A system like this will give you a jump-start into implementation of a more robust, standards-based system centering on the right number and right types of assessments all tied to appropriate interventions. Using This Report2 This report is designed to help inform the following questions driving national efforts to strengthen P-16 education. o Are your students prepared for college and career? o Are enough of your students taking core courses? o Are your core courses rigorous enough? o Are your younger students on target for college and career? o What other dimensions of college and career readiness should we track? o How is the 2011 graduating class doing? How does ACT determine if students are college ready? Empirically derived, ACT's College Readiness Benchmarks are scores on the ACT subject area tests that represent the level of achievement required for students to have a 50% chance of obtaining a B or higher or about a 75% chance of obtaining a C or higher in corresponding credit-bearing first-year college courses. These college courses include English Composition, College Algebra, Biology, and an introductory social science course. Based on a nationally representative sample, the Benchmarks are median course placement values for these institutions and as such represent a typical set of expectations. The ACT College Readiness Benchmarks are: College Course English Composition Social Sciences College Algebra Biology Subject Area Test English Reading Mathematics Science EXPLORE(R) Benchmark 13 15 17 20 PLAN(R) Benchmark 15 17 19 21 ACT(R) Benchmark 18 21 22 24 3 College & Career Readiness in Florida Attainment of College and Career Readiness o 118,420 of your graduates, which is an estimated 70% of your graduating class, took the ACT.* o From 2008-2012, the number of ACT test-taking graduates has increased by 26.1%, while the number of graduates in your state has decreased by 6.6%. Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks by Subject 100! 80! 67! Percent! 57! 46! 60! 52! 46! 37! 31! 22! 25! 18! 40! 20! 0! English! Reading! Mathematics! Nation! Science! All Four! Subjects! Florida! Percent of 2008-2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting ACT College Readiness Benchmarks 100! 80! 58! 45! 57! 46! 37! 22! 18! Percent! 60! 55! 43! 33! 19! 15! 54! 43! 34! 20! 16! 55! 44! 36! 20! 17! 40! 35! 19! 15! * Totals for graduating seniors were obtained from Knocking at the College Door: Projections of High School Graduates by State and Race/Ethnicity, 1992 to 2022, 7th edition. (C) March 2008 by the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education. Note: Percents in this report may not sum to 100% due to rounding. 20! 0! 2008! English! 2009! Reading! 2010! Mathematics! 2011! Science! 2012! All Four Subjects! 4 College & Career Readiness in Florida Near Attainment of College and Career Readiness Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Benchmark Attainment and Subject 100! 33! 80! 42! 55! 66! 12! Percent! 60! 10! 40! 57! 46! 8! 12! 37! 22! 20! 0! English! Reading! Mathematics! Science! Met Benchmark! Within 2 Points of Benchmark! Below Benchmark by 3+ Points! Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Number of ACT College Readiness Benchmarks Attained Met 1 Benchmark! 15%! Met No Benchmarks! 37%! Met 2 Benchmarks! 16%! Met 3 Benchmarks! 14%! Met All 4 Benchmarks! 18%! 5 College & Career Readiness in Florida Over the past decade, ACT has experienced unprecedented growth in the number of students tested, as well as statewide partnerships in 12 different states and in many districts across the country. As a result, the 2012 Condition of College & Career Readiness report provides a much deeper and more representative sample in comparison to a purely self-selected college-going population. Participation and Opportunity Percent of 2008-2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Race/Ethnicity* 100! 3! 9! 3! 6! 3! 6! 2! 5! 3! 4! 80! 44! Percent! 44! 42! 41! 41! 60! 40! 19! 3! 22! 21! 3! 23! 21! 3! 24! 25! 3! 24! 26! 3! 22! 20! 0! African! American! 2008! American! Indian! 2009! Asian! Hispanic! 2010! Pacific ! Islander! White! 2011! Two or! More Races! 2012! No Response! Note: Less than 0.5% will not appear. Percent of 2008-2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting Three or More Benchmarks by Race/Ethnicity* 100! 80! Percent! 60! 45! 47! 42! 30! 47! 44! 30! 42! 32! 50! 45! 29! 24! 15! 8! 50! 47! 26! 26! 26! 9! 40! 20! 22! 7! 22! 7! 23! 8! * Race/ethnicity categories changed in 2011 to reflect updated US Department of Education reporting requirements.3 0! 2008! African ! American! 2009! American! Indian! Asian! 2010! Hispanic! 2011! Pacific! Islander! 2012! White! 6 College & Career Readiness in Florida Participation and Opportunity by Subject Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks by Race/Ethnicity and Subject* English African! American! American! Indian! Asian! Hispanic! Pacific! Islander! White! All! Students! 57! 50! 48! 74! 29! 50! 69! Mathematics African! American! American! Indian! Asian! Hispanic! Pacific! Islander! White! All! Students! 37! 32! 34! 52! 13! 32! 65! Reading African! American! American! Indian! Asian! Hispanic! Pacific! Islander! White! All! Students! 46! 40! 40! 62! 22! 40! 58! Science African! American! American! Indian! Asian! Hispanic! Pacific! Islander! White! All! Students! 22! 16! 17! 33! 5! 19! 36! 7 College & Career Readiness in Florida Course-Taking Patterns and Benchmark Performance Within subjects, ACT has consistently found that students who take the recommended core curriculum are more likely to be ready for college or career than those who do not. A core curriculum is defined as four years of English and three years each of mathematics, social studies, and science.4 Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates in Core or More vs. Less Than Core Courses Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks by Subject 100! 80! Percent! 60! 58! 48! 40! 35! 29! 39! 25! 20! 5! 9! 0! English! Reading! Core or More! Mathematics! Less Than Core! Science! 8 College & Career Readiness in Florida Early Preparation ACT research shows that younger students who take a rigorous curricula are more prepared to graduate from high school ready for college or career. Moreover, our recent research (The Forgotten Middle, 2008) found that "the level of academic achievement that students attain by 8th grade has a larger impact on their college and career readiness by the time they graduate high school than anything that happens academically in high school." Percent of 2011-2012 PLAN-Tested 10th Graders Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks (N = 44,985) 100! 16! 28! 80! 14! 20! 43! 55! Percent! 60! Met No! Benchmarks! 24%! Met 1! Benchmark! 21%! 40! 24! 70! 52! 21! 20! 33! Met All 4! Benchmarks! 18%! Met 3! Benchmarks! 15%! Met 2! Benchmarks! 22%! 24! 0! English! Reading! Mathematics! Science! Met Benchmark! Within 2 Points of Benchmark! Below Benchmark by 3+ Points! Percent of 2011-2012 EXPLORE-Tested 8th Graders Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks (N = 4,401) 100! 9! 19! 14! 26! 80! 25! Percent! 59! 37! Met No Benchmarks! 18%! 60! Met 1 Benchmark! 22%! 40! 77! 55! 21! 37! 20! Met All 4 Benchmarks! 15%! Met 3 Benchmarks! 18%! 20! Met 2 Benchmarks! 26%! 0! English! Reading! Mathematics! Science! Met Benchmark! Within 2 Points of Benchmark! Below Benchmark by 3+ Points! 9 College & Career Readiness in Florida ACT has found several other substantial factors that impact college and career readiness for students. They include career and educational planning and the academic behaviors of students. Other College and Career Readiness Factors Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates with Career Interests in Jobs Calling for a Two-Year Degree or More in the State's Five Fastest-Growing Career Fields5 25! 20! 15! 10! 5! 0! 5! 2! 2! 14! Job Openings! Career Interests! Percent! 13! 9! 8! 8! 7! 8! Education! Marketing/! Sales! Management! Community! Services! Computer/! Information! Specialties! Preparation for Careers in High-Growth Fields Many students who are interested in these career areas fall short of meeting ACT's College Readiness Benchmarks, suggesting that they are not on the right path to take advantage of career opportunities in these highgrowth fields. Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Interested in High-Growth Careers Meeting College Readiness Benchmarks by Subject 100! 80! 60! 40! 20! 0! 56! 44! 31! 15! 49! 38! 28! 13! 44! 34! 27! 19! 13! 59! 49! 34! 58! 48! 45! 29! Percent! Education! Marketing/! Management! Community! Sales! Services! Reading! Mathematics! Science! Computer/! Information! Specialties! English! 10 College & Career Readiness in Florida Other College and Career Readiness Factors Percent of 2012 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Educational Aspirations 100! 80! Aligning Student Behaviors, Planning, and Aspirations Most students aspire to a post-high school credential. To help them meet those aspirations, educational planning, monitoring, and interventions must be aligned to their aspirations, begin early, and continue throughout their educational careers. Percent! 60! 38! 41! 40! 20! 6! 15! 0! Graduate/! Professional Degree! Bachelor's! Degree! Associate's/! Voc-tech Degree! Other/No! Response! Academic Achievement and Academic Behaviors High School Persistence Rates by 8th-Grade EXPLORE Benchmarks and ENGAGE(TM) Graduation Index Levels 100! 80! Persistence Rate! 79! 65! 69! 95! 89! 95! 97! 99! Impact of Academic Behaviors on High School Persistence ACT research illustrates how the combination of academic achievement and behavior yields more information than either measure alone when differentiating students for high school persistence.6 Most importantly, this information is available in 8th grade--allowing for early identification of students at risk of not completing high school.7 60! 40! 20! 0! 52! 0 Benchmarks! Low Graduation Index! 1 or 2 Benchmarks! Moderate Graduation Index! 3 or 4 Benchmarks! High Graduation Index! EXPLORE Benchmarks! 11 College & Career Readiness in Florida 2012 State Percent of High School Graduates Tested, Average Composite Score, and Percent Meeting Benchmarks by Subject State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Percent Average of Graduates Composite Tested* Score 86 35 35 88 25 100 27 14 32 70 52 27 67 100 32 63 81 100 100 9 21 23 100 74 100 75 61 78 20.3 21.2 19.7 20.3 22.1 20.6 23.8 22.6 19.7 19.8 20.7 21.3 21.6 20.9 22.3 22.1 21.9 19.8 20.3 23.4 22.1 24.1 20.1 22.8 18.7 21.6 22 22 Percent Meeting English Benchmark Percent Meeting Reading Benchmark Percent Meeting Math Benchmark Percent Meeting Science Benchmark 65 67 54 64 72 62 86 76 51 57 64 66 72 65 75 77 73 59 68 84 72 86 59 78 53 73 74 75 48 56 42 48 58 47 71 63 42 46 50 52 59 47 62 62 60 44 46 70 58 72 45 64 34 56 63 59 33 48 39 36 58 41 68 57 37 37 40 51 47 44 58 51 52 31 35 65 53 73 36 62 21 46 54 51 23 30 23 23 35 31 48 39 26 22 27 31 32 30 37 38 35 22 22 43 37 48 26 42 14 33 37 36 Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska 12 College & Career Readiness in Florida 2012 State Percent of High School Graduates Tested, Average Composite Score, and Percent Meeting Benchmarks by Subject State Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming National Percent Average of Graduates Composite Tested* Score 34 19 20 75 29 20 100 71 80 38 18 13 57 81 100 39 97 28 25 21 68 71 100 52 21.3 23.8 23.4 19.9 23.3 21.9 20.7 21.8 20.7 21.4 22.4 22.9 20.2 21.8 19.7 20.8 20.7 23 22.4 22.9 20.6 22.1 20.3 21.1 Percent Meeting English Benchmark Percent Meeting Reading Benchmark Percent Meeting Math Benchmark Percent Meeting Science Benchmark 68 85 81 57 80 69 64 71 67 66 76 81 61 73 59 61 64 78 76 76 70 75 60 67 55 73 67 45 67 58 49 58 53 55 62 68 46 58 43 48 54 66 63 66 53 59 46 52 48 68 67 33 67 56 45 49 37 49 59 61 39 54 29 48 40 62 56 62 33 54 38 46 30 49 43 22 47 34 30 34 26 35 38 42 24 37 21 29 29 43 38 43 25 38 28 31 * Totals for graduating seniors were obtained from Knocking at the College Door: Projections of High School Graduates by State and Race/Ethnicity, 1992 to 2022, 7th edition. (C) March 2008 by the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education. 13 College & Career Readiness in Florida Looking Back at the Class of 2011 College Readiness Benchmarks and Fall 2011 College Enrollment Academic achievement, as measured by ACT College Readiness Benchmark attainment, has a clear and distinctive relationship with the path taken by high school graduates. Those who were more academically ready were more likely to enroll in 4-year institutions. Graduates who enrolled in 2-year colleges or pursued other options after high school were more likely to have met fewer Benchmarks. For the sizeable number of 2011 graduates who did not meet any Benchmarks, their post-high school opportunities appear to have been limited compared to their college-ready peers. Percent of 2011 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Number of ACT College Readiness Benchmarks Attained Met 1 Benchmark! 15%! Met No Benchmarks! 39%! Met 2 Benchmarks! 16%! Met 3 Benchmarks! 13%! Met All 4 Benchmarks! 17%! Percent of 2011 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Number of ACT College Readiness Benchmarks Attained and Fall 2011 College Enrollment Status 100! 80! 64! Percent! 60! 41! 40! 22! 35! 25! 20! 18! 7! 6! 0! Zero! 2-Year! One! 4-Year Public! Two! 4-Year Non-Public! Three! Four! Other/Unknown! 14 Policies and Practices How to Increase College Readiness Approximately 28% of all 2012 ACT-tested high school graduates did not meet any of the ACT College Readiness Benchmarks, meaning they were not prepared academically for first-year college courses in English Composition, College Algebra, Biology, and social sciences. There are steps that states, districts, schools, and classrooms can take to increase student readiness for college-level work. Essential Standards. Since ACT first released Making the Dream a Reality in 2008, we have called for states to adopt education standards that prepare all students for the rigors of college or career training programs. With the adoption of the Common Core State Standards by 45 states and the District of Columbia, most states have taken that first step on the road to ensuring all students are ready for college or career. It is imperative now that policymakers and practitioners continue this process by aligning all aspects of their systems to college and career readiness. Common Expectations. All states--especially those that have adopted the Common Core State Standards--should be aligning college and career readiness standards to a rigorous core curriculum for all high school students whether they are bound for college or work. The levels of expectation for college readiness and workforce training readiness should be comparable. To ensure students master the knowledge and skills to succeed after high school, ACT supports the core curriculum recommendations of A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform--specifically that students take a core curriculum consisting of at least four years of English and three years each of mathematics, science, and social studies. Clear Performance Standards. States must define "how good is good enough" for college and career readiness. In addition to a consistent, rigorous set of essential K-12 content standards, states must define performance standards so that students, parents, and teachers know how well students must perform academically to have a reasonable chance of success at college or on the job. Based on decades of student performance data, ACT defines "college readiness" as students having a 50% chance of earning a grade of B or higher or about a 75% chance of earning a grade of C or higher in first-year college English Composition; College Algebra; Biology; or History, Psychology, Sociology, Political Science, or Economics. Rigorous High School Courses. Having appropriate and aligned standards, coupled with a core curriculum, will adequately prepare high school students only if the courses are truly challenging. That is, taking the right kinds of courses matters more than taking the right number of courses. Students who take a rigorous core curriculum should be ready for credit-bearing first-year college courses without remediation. Early Monitoring and Intervention. We know from our empirical data that students who take challenging curricula are much better prepared to graduate high school ready for college or career training opportunities. If students are to be ready for college or career when they graduate, their progress must be monitored closely so that deficiencies in foundational skills can be identified and remediated early, in upper elementary and middle school. In addition, age-appropriate career assessment, exploration, and planning activities that encourage students to consider and focus on personally relevant career options should be a part of this process so that students can plan their high school coursework accordingly. Data-Driven Decisions. States have been hard at work developing longitudinal P-16 data systems--this work must continue and accelerate. If states are serious about ensuring more of their students are prepared for college and work in the 21st century, they must develop systems that allow schools and districts to closely monitor student performance at every stage of the learning pipeline, from preschool through the elementary, middle, and high school grades, all the way through college. Use of a longitudinal data system enables educators to identify students who are in need of academic interventions at an early stage, thus giving teachers and students more time to strengthen these skills before graduation. Longitudinal data systems provide a tool to schools to ensure all their students take and complete the right number and kinds of courses before graduation. Using a longitudinal assessment system also permits schools to evaluate the value added by each core course in helping students to become ready for college and career. Such systems allow colleges to offer feedback reports to high schools that examine how well prepared each high school's graduates are for college. These reports can be used to strengthen high school curricula. College & Career Readiness 15 College & Career Readiness Policies and Practices District, School, and Classroom Practices The Path to Readiness: It Takes a System Research by the National Center for Educational Achievement (NCEA)--a department of ACT--shows that no single program or isolated reform can be a substitute for a coherent, longterm, systemwide approach to improving teaching and learning. We all want our students to graduate prepared to take on future opportunities with success. So, what are consistently higher performing schools doing to place more students on the path to college and career readiness? The Core Practice Framework, built upon the study of more than 550 schools across 20 states, identifies the core practices that distinguish a higher performing school from its average performing counterparts. NCEA studies the practices of those schools and school systems that have more success in preparing their students for college and careers than their peers who serve similar student populations. Our ongoing research supports the Framework and adds content and information to each of the core practices below. The 15 Practices of Higher Performing School Systems The Core Practice Framework outlines the evidence-based educator practices at each level of a school system--district, school, and classroom--that will help all students master high standards. The Framework focuses on five themes: Theme 1: Curriculum and Academic Goals District Practice: Provide clear, prioritized learning objectives by grade and subject that all students are expected to master. School Practice: Set expectations and goals for teaching and learning based on the district's written curriculum. Classroom Practice: Study and use the district's written curriculum to plan all instruction. Theme 2: Staff Selection, Leadership, and Capacity Building District Practice: Provide strong principals, a talented teacher pool, and layered professional development. School Practice: Select and develop teachers to ensure high-quality instruction. Classroom Practice: Collaborate as a primary means for improving instruction. Theme 3: Instructional Tools: Programs and Strategies District Practice: Provide evidence- and standards-based instructional tools that support academic rigor for all students. School Practice: Promote strategies and build structures and schedules to support academic rigor. Classroom Practice: Use proven instructional tools to support rigorous learning for students. Theme 4: Monitoring Performance and Progress District Practice: Develop and use student assessment and data management systems to monitor student learning. School Practice: Monitor teacher performance and student learning. Classroom Practice: Analyze and discuss student performance data. Theme 5: Intervention and Adjustment District Practice: Respond to data through targeted interventions or curricular/instructional adjustments. School Practice: Use targeted interventions to address learning needs of teachers and students. Classroom Practice: Use targeted interventions or adjustments to address learning needs of students. Another layer behind the Framework, the Critical Actions, provides additional support for educators by outlining how to successfully implement the key components of each core practice. The Core Practice Framework Reading from bottom to top, the path to readiness begins with ACT's College and Career Readiness Standards, Common Core State Standards, and district learning objectives. Applying the 15 core practices of teaching and learning leads to high-quality instruction, which in turn creates the opportunity for all students to reach ACT's College Readiness Benchmarks. To learn more, please visit www.nc4ea.org. 16 Resources Statewide Partnerships in College and Career Readiness States that incorporate ACT's college and career readiness solutions as part of their statewide assessments provide greater access to higher education and increase the likelihood of student success in postsecondary education. Educators also have the ability to establish a longitudinal plan using ACT's assessments, which provide high schools, districts, and states with unique studentlevel data that can be used for effective student intervention plans. State administration of ACT's programs and services: o Increases opportunities for minority and middleto low-income students. o Promotes student educational and career planning. o Reduces the need for remediation. o Correlates with increases in college enrollment, persistence, and student success. o Aligns with state standards. College & Career Readiness 8th- and 9th-grade students 10th-grade 11th- and 8th11th- and students 12th-grade through 12th-grade students 12th-grade students students Alabama Arkansas Florida Illinois Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Minnesota North Carolina Oklahoma Tennessee Utah West Virginia Wyoming Arkansas Colorado Illinois Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Montana North Carolina North Dakota Tennessee Utah Wyoming Alabama Kentucky Illinois Michigan North Carolina North Dakota Wyoming National WorkKeys(R)Career based Readiness certificates Certificates Alaska Connecticut Indiana Iowa Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Minnesota Missouri Montana New Hampshire New Mexico North Dakota Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania South Dakota Tennessee Vermont Wisconsin Alabama Arkansas Colorado Florida Georgia Indiana Kansas Mississippi North Carolina Oklahoma South Carolina Virginia West Virginia Wyoming Alabama Arkansas Illinois Kentucky Louisiana Michigan Minnesota Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee Utah West Virginia Wyoming 17 College & Career Readiness Resources ACT Research As a not-for-profit educational research organization, ACT is committed to producing research that focuses on key issues in education and workforce development. Our goal is to serve as a data resource. We strive to provide policymakers with the information they need to inform education and workforce development policy and to give educators the tools they need to lead more students toward college and career success. What follows are some of ACT's recent and most groundbreaking research studies. To review these studies, go to www.act.org/research/summary. The Condition of College & Career Readiness Using ACT test scores and the ACT College National Readiness Benchmarks, The Condition of College & Career Readiness 2012 provides a series of graphics highlighting the college and career readiness of the ACT-tested high school class of 2012. This report is updated annually. The Condition of College & Career Readiness l 2012 The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems A First Look at the Common Core and College and Career Readiness Forty-five states and the District of Columbia have adopted the Common Core State Standards. Now, efforts to implement the Standards take on primary importance. ACT provides this first look at student performance relative to the Common Core State Standards and college and career readiness. COLLEGE READINESS The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems Discover the 20 hard-hitting characteristics that make school systems successful at preparing students for college and careers. A First Look at Higher Performing High Schools A First Look at Higher Performing High Schools There are high schools across the country that are demonstrating strong growth toward college and career readiness. ACT provides this first look at school qualities that personnel at these high schools believe make the greatest difference in preparing students for college and careers. Aligning District Practices to Support High-Quality Instruction Report Published: April 2011 Authored by: National Center for Educational Achievement (NCEA) | ACT, Inc. School Qualities that Educators Believe Contribute Most to College and Career Readiness A Better Measure of Skills Gaps This report proposes a simple definition to describe the increasing mismatch between labor market supply and demand in America and sets forth detailed and specific measures to analyze skills gaps in four major industry sectors. The Forgotten Middle This report examines the factors that influence college and career readiness. The percentage of 8th graders on target to be ready for college-level work by the time they graduate from high school is so small that it raises questions not only about the prospect that these students can eventually be ready for college and career but also about whether they are even ready for high school. Enrollment Management Trends Report | 2012 A snapshot of the 2011 ACT-tested high school graduates Enrollment Management Trends Report This report provides enrollment managers and other college administrators with information about students' patterns during their college choice process for 2011 high school graduates who took the ACT test. 18 College & Career Readiness in Florida Endnotes 1. See, for example, National Center for Educational Achievement (NCEA), The Core Practice Framework: A Guide to Sustained School Improvement (Austin, TX: ACT, Inc., 2012); NCEA, The 20 Non-Negotiable Characteristics of Higher Performing School Systems (Austin, TX: ACT, Inc., 2011); NCEA, Core Practices in Math and Science: An Investigation of Consistently Higher Performing School Systems in Five States (Austin, TX: ACT, Inc., 2009); ACT, Affirming the Goal: Is College and Career Readiness an Internationally Competitive Standard? (Iowa City, IA: ACT, Inc., 2011); ACT, A First Look at the Common Core and College and Career Readiness (Iowa City, IA: ACT, Inc., 2010). 2. The data presented herein are based on the ACT Profile Report--State: Graduating Class 2012 for each respective state, and accessible at www.act.org/readiness/2012. With the exception of the top graph on page 6, data related to students who did not provide information or who responded "Other" to questions about gender, race/ethnicity, high school curriculum, etc., are not presented explicitly. 3. The race/ethnicity categories changed in 2011 to reflect updated US Department of Education reporting requirements; trends to previous reports may not be available for all race/ethnicity categories. 4. Data reflect subject-specific curriculum. For example, English "Core or More" results pertain to students who took at least four years of English, regardless of courses taken in other subject areas. 5. State long-term occupational projections for 2010-2018 (based on job growth and job replacement provided by Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation). The occupations that are used to calculate the projected high-growth career fields are based on a combination of the following: the occupational criteria used by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics to obtain state-level occupation data, occupational shifts that reflect a state's economic situation, and the ACT Career Classification system that organizes occupations into career fields. Career interests and achievement results based on 2012 ACT-tested Florida students (n = 85,199) with valid career information and subject scores. Sample occupations within state high-growth career fields are Education (secondary teachers, administrators, etc.); Marketing/Sales (insurance agents, buyers, etc.); Management (convention planners, hotel/restaurant managers, etc.); Community Services (social workers, school counselors, etc.); Computer/ Information Specialties (computer programmers, database administrators, etc.). 6. Across all EXPLORE Benchmark attainment levels, students with higher ENGAGE Graduation Index scores, which are based on a combination of ENGAGE scale scores and other self-reported student information, had higher high school persistence rates than students with lower Graduation Index scores. 7. Data are based on 2,986 8th graders in 24 middle schools across the country who took EXPLORE and ENGAGE Grades 6-9, an assessment of academic behaviors. High school persistence is defined as having graduated high school or being on track to graduate within four years of starting 9th grade. These data do not reflect the entire 2012 ACT-tested high school graduate cohort. ACT National and Regional Offices ACT National Office 500 ACT Drive P.O. Box 168 Iowa City, Iowa 52243-0168 Telephone: 319.337.1000 Midwest Region Chicago Office 300 Knightsbridge Parkway Suite 300 Lincolnshire, Illinois 60069-9498 Telephone: 847.634.2560 Southeast Region Atlanta Office 3355 Lenox Road NE Suite 320 Atlanta, Georgia 30326-1332 Telephone: 404.231.1952 West Region Sacramento Office 2880 Sunrise Boulevard Suite 214 Rancho Cordova, California 95742-6103 Telephone: 916.631.9200 Lansing Office 1001 Centennial Way Suite 400 Lansing, Michigan 48917-8249 Telephone: 517.327.5919 Tallahassee Office 1315 E. Lafayette Street Suite A Tallahassee, Florida 32301-4757 Telephone: 850.878.2729 Columbus Office 700 Taylor Road Suite 210 Gahanna, Ohio 43230-3318 Telephone: 614.470.9828 Mountain/Plains Region Denver Office 3131 S. Vaughn Way Suite 218 Aurora, Colorado 80014-3507 Telephone: 303.337.3273 NCEA Austin Office 8701 N. MoPac Expressway Suite 200 Austin, Texas 78759-8364 Telephone: 512.320.1800 Northeast Region Boston Office 144 Turnpike Road Suite 370 Southborough, Massachusetts 01772-2121 Telephone: 508.229.0111 Southwest Region Austin Office 8701 N. MoPac Expressway Suite 200 Austin, Texas 78759-8364 Telephone: 512.320.1850 ACT is an independent, not-for-profit organization that provides assessment, research, information, and program management services in the broad areas of education and workforce development. Each year, we serve millions of people in high schools, colleges, professional associations, businesses, and government agencies, nationally and internationally. Though designed to meet a wide array of needs, all ACT programs and services have one guiding purpose--helping people achieve education and workplace success. A copy of this report can be found at www.act.org/readiness/2012 18474