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Key Lessons About Preventing Dropouts (page 2)

Center for Public Education
Updated on Dec 20, 2011

Intervention: What to do for high-risk students once they're identified

1.  Ongoing, comprehensive, and personalized attention from counselors can reduce dropout rates even for the most at-risk students.

Rigorous experimental studies have shown that programs like Check & Connect (http://ici.umn.edu/checkandconnect/ ), that provide intensive, sustained, comprehensive, and coordinated interventions can reduce four-year high school dropout rates among highly at-risk students by one-third, and five-year rates by one-half (Sinclair et al. 1998, Sinclair et al. 2005). Programs that work use counselors as case managers who build sustained relationships with students, closely monitor each student's attendance and performance, intervene rapidly at the first sign of trouble, help students and families overcome obstacles to educational success, and teach students how to solve problems.

2.  Low-intensity programs that provide occasional tutoring, counseling, or activities to boost self-esteem do almost nothing to keep students in school.

In a rigorous experimental evaluation of the federal School Dropout Demonstration Assistance Program, middle school interventions that provided low-intensity supplemental services—such as tutoring, counseling, or workshops to enhance self-esteem or leadership skills—had no impact on dropout rates (Dynarski and Gleason 1998). However, students in two alternative middle schools completed more credits and were only half as likely to drop out.

Prevention: How schools can minimize risk factors

1.  Better preparation in lower grades helps get students on track for high school graduation, but what they encounter in their high school makes a difference, too.

K-8 reforms in Chicago during the 1990s improved reading and math achievement, which subsequently helped raise graduation rates (Roderick 2006, Allensworth 2004). However, about one in four freshmen who enter Chicago high schools with high eighth grade test scores (in the top quarter) fall off track during ninth grade, and only about one-third of those students recover to graduate on time (Allensworth and Easton 2005).

2.  Size matters. So do relationships and curriculum.

Some high schools have better "holding power" than others with similar students. Students who attend high schools that have smaller enrollments; better interpersonal relationships among students and adults; teachers who are supportive of students; and a focused, rigorous, and relevant curriculum drop out at lower rates (DeLuca and Rosenbaum 2000, Croninger and Lee 2001, Lee and Burkam 2003, Plank et al. 2005). Providing more support to ninth graders via interdisciplinary teaching teams or small learning communities (often called "academies") can reduce dropout rates (Kerr and Legters 2004).

3.  Some high school reform models can help students stay in school.

Career Academies (http://www.ncacinc.org/ncacinc/site/default.asp)—small schools-within-schools that combine challenging academics with career and technical training—reduce four-year dropout rates by one-third (Kemple and Snipes 2000). Talent Development high schools (http://www.csos.jhu.edu/tdhs/) employ a ninth-grade Success Academy that provides intensive social support and academic support (doubling the amount of math and reading to help students get caught up). In Philadelphia, a group of neighborhood high schools replicating Talent Development have seen substantial gains in attendance, academic credits earned, and promotion rates for several cohorts of ninth graders (Kemple et al. 2005). 

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