I came across these comments by Bill Gates this week to a Senate Committee
on "Strengthening American Competitiveness." I've excerpted a couple of
his
most "amazing" claims, involving spectacular gains in high school
graduation
and in acceptance to four-year colleges. Does anyone on the list know
more
about these "examples"? For example, who goes to these schools? How many
of them
require students/families to sign a contract as a precondition for
acceptance
and meet its requirements or get booted out? How are the "average
graduation
rates" calculated? And so on.
Thanks.
Craig Gordon
Thursday, March 08, 2007
Bill Gates: U.S. Senate Committee Hearing on Strengthening American
Competitiveness
http://allintellects.blogspot.com/2007/03/bill-gates-us-senate-committee-heari
ng.html
New York City has opened almost 200 new schools in the last five years,
with many replacing the city's most underperforming schools. Our
foundation
supports this effort through advocacy and grant-making. The first set of
new
schools achieved an average 79 percent graduation rate compared to
graduation
rates ranging from 31 to 51 percent at the schools they replaced.
Early-college high schools are perhaps the most innovative initiative
underway nationally. The approach is to recruit low-performing students
to attend
high schools that require enrollment in college courses. The results are
astounding. Currently, there are more than 125 early-college high schools
in
operation around the country. So far, more than 95 percent of the first
class of
ninth graders at the original three early-college high schools have
graduated,
and over 80 percent of students have been accepted into four-year
colleges.
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