Program aims to help ease transition to college work

The Post and Courier
Tuesday, March 18, 2008


On the academic ride from high school to college, the track doesn't quite line up, causing some students to derail in their early college years, state educators say.

Clint Mullins, a program manager at the state's Commission on Higher Education, said professors who teach freshmen often complain that many of their students just aren't prepared for college-level work. But the majority of high school teachers say they're doing all they can to prepare students for college.

A new statewide project is looking for ways to give students "a seamless transition" from high school to higher education, Mullins said. "We'll be looking at the disconnect between the two systems."

A smooth transition is important, he said, because students who successfully complete two years of college usually graduate on time.

Education leaders from colleges and universities, technical colleges, the state's kindergarten-through-12th-grade system and business leaders gathered for a kickoff meeting in December, Mullins said.

Teams will soon begin to design paired courses that students will take before exiting high school and soon after entering college, he said.

Jeremy Dickens, 19, a Fort Dorchester High School graduate who is in his first year at Trident Technical College, said he would have liked a more coordinated academic approach, especially in math.

Dickens is now taking a specially designed beginning algebra course that meets five days a week. He had originally enrolled in a course that covered the same material, but met just three days each week — a more traditional style for college courses.

He struggled in that course.

"I thought classes would be the same as in high school," he said. But in college, "it's all about the test." In high school, homework accounted for a larger portion of his grade.

His college courses also move much more quickly, and he has to work more independently, he said.

It would have helped if teachers in his last two years of high school had better prepared him for the way classes are taught in college, he said.

Pamela Leonard-Ray, dean of the learning center at Trident, said students in pre-college courses often need assistance with not only the academic material but time management and study skills as well.

Other things also get in their way, such as an over-reliance on a calculator in math classes and difficulty understanding the vocabulary in college textbooks.

Melissa Stowasser,Trident Tech's director of high school programs, said that many college students taking literature courses are unable to analyze what they have read.

That, in turn, affects their writing, Stowasser said. "They don't know what to say," she said.

Stowasser, who is working on the statewide alignment project, said such work "is a long time overdue."

"There's a big gap between what we want and what high schools think we want," she said.

Reach Diane Knich at 937-5491 or dknich@postandcourier.com.



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Comments

This article has  3 comment(s)

Posted by theronce on March 18, 2008 at 8:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Over-reliance on calculators causes problems, and difficulty with understanding vocabulary causes problems. Duhhh. Doesn't anyone think that successfully adjusting to minor change on one's own is an important skill to learn. I could not afford a calculator when they came out. I can now and can use it quite easily. I bet it would be easier to teach children later in life how to use a calculator than to teach them later in life how to use their minds. Haven't we pampered students enough in 12 years of public education. This is a waste of effort and money.



Posted by mominthesouth on March 18, 2008 at 10:45 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I have a child who is taking 4 Trident Tech classes at Wando High School for dual credit. It has been a fantastic experience for him. He not only saw first hand how college professors taught but experienced time management problems. He had to work hard with no help from his parents. I praise Ms. Lucy Beckham for having the insight to bring these classes to Wando. The professors were great and each quite different. I truly believe he is ready to make that next step to college.



Posted by outrage on March 18, 2008 at 8:01 p.m. (Suggest removal)

theronce - I agree. All these changes in education over the last three decades and the kids are in worse shape today!