Redefining College Readiness
Redefining College Readiness
Redefining College Readiness
College Readiness
David T. Conley
Prepared for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, March 2007
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Table of Contents
Introduction . .
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General Characteristics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Example Performances. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
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Introduction
The purpose of this paper is to provide an
operational definition of college readiness
that differs from current representations of
this concept primarily in its scope. The paper
suggests that, while much has been learned
about this phenomenon, particularly during
the past 20 years, few systematic attempts
have been made to integrate the various
aspects or components of college readiness
that have been investigated in some depth
during this period of time. As a result, college
readiness continues to be defined primarily
in terms of high school courses taken and
grades received along with scores on national
tests as its primary metrics.
Recent research has shed light on several
key elements of college success. Most important
for this paper is the realization that a range of
cognitive and metacognitive capabilities, often
described as key cognitive strategies, have
been consistently and emphatically identified
by those who teach entry-level college courses
as being as important or more important than
any specific content knowledge taught in high
school. Examples of key key cognitive strategies
include analysis, interpretation, precision and
accuracy, problem solving, and reasoning.
Close behind in importance is knowledge
of specific types of content knowledge. Several
studies have led to college readiness standards
that specify key content knowledge associated
with college success. Writing may be by far the
single academic skill most closely associated
with college success, but the big ideas of
each content area are also very important
building blocks.
Similarly important are the attitudes and
behavioral attributes that students who succeed
in college must demonstrate. Among these are
study skills, time management, awareness of
ones performance, persistence, and the ability
to utilize study groups. These are both specific
skills and more general attitudes, but all of
them require high degrees of self-awareness
and intentionality on the part of students as
they enter college.
An Operational
Definition of College Readiness
College readiness can be defined
operationally as the level of preparation a
student needs in order to enroll and succeed
without remediationin a credit-bearing
general education course at a postsecondary
institution that offers a baccalaureate degree
or transfer to a baccalaureate program.
Succeed is defined as completing entrylevel courses at a level of understanding and
proficiency that makes it possible for the
student to consider taking the next course in
the sequence or the next level of course in
the subject area. This conception is calibrated
against what our recent research has come to
define as best practices entry-level courses
as opposed to the stereotypical freshman
course (Conley, Aspengren, Gallagher, & Nies,
2006a, 2006b; Conley, Aspengren, Stout, &
Veach, 2006c). If students are prepared to
succeed in best practices courses, they will
be able to cope with the full range of college
courses they are likely to encounter.
The college-ready student envisioned by
this definition is able to understand what is
expected in a college course, can cope with the
content knowledge that is presented, and can
take away from the course the key intellectual
Redefining College Readiness
How College Is
Different from High School
College is different from high school in
many important ways, some obvious, some
not so obvious. College is the first place where
we expect young people to be adults, not
Redefining College Readiness
Current Means to
Determine College Readiness
While it is beyond the scope of this paper to
present a full critique of current conceptions and
constructions of college readiness, it is worthwhile
to consider briefly some of the limitations of the
current key measures, most notably among them
course titles, grade-point averages, and tests, as
well as a related measure, performance in entrylevel general education courses subsequent
to admission. This brief overview is presented
to accentuate the need for a more robust and
comprehensive definition of college readiness,
one that leads to new tools, methods, and indices
that will help students understand how ready
for college they are and will help high schools
make systematic improvements to increase the
number of college-ready students who graduate
each year. Each of the major measures and their
limitations is discussed briefly in turn.
Tests
Beyond using high school course titles to
define college readiness, a more direct approach
is to test a set of knowledge that students
are presumed to need to know to succeed
in college entry-level courses. Admissions
Remedial Education
The high proportion of students who are
identified as needing remedial or developmental
education is frequently cited as evidence of the
limitations of current admissions measures.
While the precise number of students requiring
remediation is difficult to ascertain, federal statistics
Redefining College Readiness
General Education
Student performance in general education
courses has long been an issue in postsecondary
education, where these courses come to serve as
the real arbiter of admission. These gateway
courses restrict access to majors and also tend
to weed out students who are incapable of
succeeding in them. When students struggle
in entry-level courses, it extends their time to
degree completion, a hidden cost of inadequate
or inappropriate preparation. Failure rates in
Components in a Comprehensive
Definition of College Readiness
College readiness is a multi-faceted
concept comprising numerous variables that
include factors both internal and external to
the school environment. In order to provide
a functional representation of the key facets
of college readiness, the model presented
below organizes the key areas necessary
for college readiness into four concentric
levels. These four areas of college readiness
knowledge and skills emerge from a review of
the literature and are those that can be most
directly influenced by schools.
The
student
analyzes
competing and conflicting descriptions
of an event or issue to determine the
strengths and flaws in each description
and any commonalities among or
distinctions between them; synthesizes
the results of an analysis of competing
or conflicting descriptions of an event
or issue or phenomenon into a coherent
explanation; states the interpretation that
is most likely correct or is most reasonable,
based on the available evidence; and
presents orally or in writing an extended
description, summary, and evaluation of
varied perspectives and conflicting points
of view on a topic or issue.
Interpretation:
Academic Behaviors
This facet of college readiness encompasses
a range of behaviors that reflect greater
student
self-awareness,
self-monitoring,
and self-control of a series of processes and
behaviors necessary for academic success.
Key academic
behaviors
consist largely of
self-monitoring and
study skills.
Another important area of college readiness
is student mastery of the study skills necessary
for college success. The underlying premise is
simple: academic success requires the mastery
of key skills necessary to comprehend material
and complete academic tasks successfully, and
the nature of college learning in particular
requires that significant amounts of time be
devoted to learning outside of class for success
General Characteristics
Students who possess sufficient mastery
of key cognitive strategies, key content
knowledge,
academic
behaviors,
and
contextual knowledge would be defined as
being college-ready to the degree to which
they could demonstrate the following:
1. Consistent
intellectual
growth
and
development over four years of high school
resulting from the study of increasingly
challenging, engaging, coherent academic
content.
Example Performances
The general characteristics listed above are
suggestive or descriptive of tasks that students
will have to be able to complete in college
courses. The following examples, while far
from all-inclusive, illustrate what a student who
has sufficient competence in the general areas
listed above would be able to do in a college
course. Any student who can do the following
with proficiency will likely be ready for a range
of postsecondary learning experiences.
Write a 3- to 5-page research paper that is
structured around a cogent, coherent line of
reasoning, incorporate references from several
credible and appropriate citations; is relatively
free from spelling, grammatical, and usage
errors; and is clear and easily understood by
the reader.
Read with understanding a range of
non-fiction
publications
and
technical
materials, utilizing appropriate decoding
and comprehension strategies to identify key
points; note areas of question or confusion,
remember key terminology, and understand
the basic conclusions reached and points of
view expressed.
Employ fundamentals of algebra to solve
multi-step problems, including problems
without one obvious solution and problems
requiring additional math beyond algebra; do
so with a high degree of accuracy, precision
and attention to detail, and be able to explain
the rationale for the strategies pursued and the
methods utilized.
Conduct basic scientific experiments or
analyses that require the following: use of the
scientific method; an inquisitive perspective on
the process; interpretation of data or observations
in relation to an initial hypothesis; possible or
plausible explanation of unanticipated results;
and presentation of findings to a critical audience
using the language of science, including models,
systems, and theories.
Conduct research on a topic and be able
to identify successfully a series of source
materials that are important and appropriate
to explain the question being researched;
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