How Florida Is Setting Students Up for Failure By Not Mandating Remedial Courses

Oct 4, 2016 12:00:00 AM

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Another research organization took a fresh look at the issue of remedial education, confirming once again that yes, our nation’s college goers are spending more than $1 billion to learn in college what they should have learned in high school. But what really jumped out from the Center for American Progress’ new report was just how widely states varied when it came to the percentage of first-time college students taking remedial classes. California topped the list for the amount of money spent on college remediation—$205 million—while in Florida, a staggering 93 percent of first-time college students landed in remedial courses. Here’s what we do know about remedial courses: [pullquote]Nationwide, more than 40 percent of first-year college students require remediation in English, math, or both.[/pullquote] Students enrolled in these courses rarely receive college credit, are more likely to drop out of college without obtaining a degree, and even if they do graduate, take almost a year longer to finish their degree. Contrary to common belief, it’s not just first-generation and low-income students shunted into these dead-end courses. Nearly half of remedial students come from middle-income and affluent families, and about 40 percent are attending public or private four-year colleges, according to a report from Education Post and Education Reform Now, released earlier this year. And while students of color do have higher rates of remediation, 35 percent of white students end up in remedial courses.

Florida's Education System Failure

But let’s go back to Florida, which can now serve as a worst-case exemplar of how NOT to handle an epidemic of high school graduates needing college remediation. Think about that eye-popping number for a minute—a number that speaks to an unconscionable failure by Florida’s education system to prepare students for postsecondary success and a shot at the middle class. When remediation rates are that high, you can’t glibly blame students or parents or poverty or greedy colleges for accepting unprepared students. This represents a systemic breakdown of its K-12 system. To be clear, the data in this CAP report dates back to the high school class entering college the fall of 2009—an embarrassing low that inspired Florida legislators to spring into action to fix those dismal stats. Remediation numbers have since dropped precipitously in Florida but, unfortunately, for all the wrong reasons. Instead of trying to truly address why so many Florida high school graduates were struggling in college, Florida decided to make remedial education optional and just pretend high school graduates were ready. As this Inside Higher Ed article noted:
In 2013, Florida legislators sought a way to help students save money and encourage them to stay in college. Developmental education courses, which are not credit bearing and don’t count toward a degree, would no longer be mandated for traditional high school graduates who don’t score well on the state’s standard placement tests. And the placement test that would determine whether a student should enter a developmental education course was no longer mandatory, either.
Guess who wasn’t exempt from the tests and courses? Adults and non-traditional students—not because these students are more likely to persevere despite the setback of remediation, but because the struggle of those students can’t easily be blamed on the high schools that just handed them a diploma. (Of course Florida takes great pride in its rising high school graduation rate, which has increased almost 20 percentage points in the past 11 years).

Students Need Skills To Complete College

Guess what happened after Florida made the placement tests and classes optional? Students stopped taking them. At Miami-Dade College, enrollment dropped by 42 percent in remedial math and by 46 percent in remedial reading. Many unprepared students just enrolled in credit-bearing college-level classes. Guess what happened next? Yep, students flunked those regular college courses, which cost them money, stalled their progress, threatened their financial aid and left them even more discouraged. The outcome was predictable, one college director told Inside Higher Ed:
“This isn’t rocket science. If students don’t have the skills to complete a college course and you let them take the course, there’s a likelihood they’ll fail the course. What did they expect? All along this legislation was questioned by experts in the field.” The law, in essence, left the decision up to students to figure out if they were college ready, or not. Yet students often aren’t sophisticated about the level of rigor in college courses, even in a remedial or developmental course. …Researchers at Florida State University’s Center for Postsecondary Success have been studying the effects of the legislation and found results across the state similar to St. Petersburg and Miami-Dade. Students are reluctant to enroll in developmental education courses even when advised to do so.
This misguided law is still on the books, which means the state’s remedial rates will stay artificially low for the coming years. There is some hope that the state’s higher standards will help close the yawning gap and better prepare high school graduates for college. The state adopted the Common Core State Standards in 2010, and later renamed them the “Florida Standards” after the Common Core label proved unpopular with voters, but left the standards as written largely intact. In the meantime, the responsibility for fixing this problem has fallen on Florida colleges, which have been forced to rethink how they teach remedial courses and how to urge unprepared students that passing a remedial class makes a lot more sense than flunking a regular college course. As another college director observed:
It’s like their heads are in the sand.
Photo courtesy of State Impact, an NPR project.

Tracy Dell’Angela

Tracy Dell’Angela is a writer, education nonprofit executive director and a mom passionate about education improvements. Previously, Tracy was Director of Outreach and Communications for the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) at the U.S. Department of Education in Washington, D.C. She came to IES from the University of Chicago Consortium on Chicago School Research, which produces research that drives improvement in Chicago and nationwide. She also served as Senior Project Director for 100Kin10 at the University of Chicago and was Director of Program Investments and Partnerships for the Chicago Public Education Fund. Tracy spent most of her career as an award-winning newspaper journalist, including 12 years at the Chicago Tribune as an education reporter covering national policy and the Chicago Public Schools. A Californian by birth but a Chicagoan in spirit, Tracy attended University of Chicago as a master's student in social sciences and earned a B.A. in journalism and political science from San Diego State University.

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