When the students expect me to celebrate them for doing what I expected them to do. Oh? You pulled your book out first and managed to do it quietly? Great job.

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When the students expect me to celebrate them for doing what I expected them to do. Oh? You pulled your book out first and managed to do it quietly? Great job.
Social class divides the futures of high school students.
By Philip Cohen, PhD
There is new research from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), written up by Susan Dynarsky at the New York Times Upshot. The striking finding is that poor children in the top quartile on high school math scores have a 41% chance of finishing a BA degree by their late twenties — the same chance as children from the second-lowest quartile in math scores who are high-socioeconomic status (SES). Poor children from the third-highest quartile in high school math have graduation about equal to the worst-scoring children form the richest group. The figure is above.
The headline on the figure is misleading, actually, since SES is not measured by wealth, but by a combination of parental education, occupation, and income. (Low here means the bottom quartile of SES, Middle is the 25th to 75th percentile, and High is 75th and up.)
One possible mechanism for the disparity in college completion rates is education expectations. Dynarsky mentions expectations measured in the sophomore year of high school, which was 2002 for this cohort. What she doesn’t mention is how much those expectations changed by senior year. Going to the NCES source for that data (here) I found this chart, which I annotated in red:
Between sophomore and senior year, the percentage expecting to finish a BA degree or more decreased and the percentage expecting to go to two-year college increased, across SES levels. But the change was much greater for lower SES students. So the gap in expecting to go to two-year college between high- and low-SES students grew from 6 to 17 percentage points; that is, from 9% versus 3% in the sophomore year to 22% versus 6% in the senior year.
That’s a big crushing of expectations that happened in the formative years at the end of high school.
Cross-posted at Family Inequality.
Philip N. Cohen is a professor of sociology at the University of Maryland, College Park. He writes the blog Family Inequality and is the author of The Family: Diversity, Inequality, and Social Change. You can follow him on Twitter or Facebook.
* M is for miserable
Blogging A-Z: M is for miserable. I have taught a bunch of miserablekids in the past few days. Their misery stems from the mismatch between their abilities and the regular classroom expectations, between their inabilities and their own high expectations. One student sat across from me, speechless as tears formed in her eyes. She was confronting a cascade of failure at school. Not only is…
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This shift in student values and expectations is real; yet serious systemic solutions for how universities at an institutional level can adapt to these changes has been largely missing from the conversation about higher ed’s future.
How, for example, are we going to more effectively serve and interface with student populations that...
attend, perhaps more than ever before, to the outcomes of their education;
expect a return on their investment and increasingly demand internships, practical experience and direct windows into possible employment paths from the very start of their post-secondary careers;
value personalization that is embedded in their day-to-day experiences and that responds to both their weaknesses and strengths;
prefer optimized pathways that recognize and credit prior knowledge and experience and allow them to move at their own pace;
opt to work across multiple institutions and multiple instructional contexts to get to goal; and
demand a student experience accessible anytime, anywhere, and on any device.