|
Each semester the CSC host a group of high school students at one of the higher education institutions around the Twin Cities as part of the Center's efforts to increase PSEO participation . On April 30th, 2009, Sheena Thao, CSC Outreach Specialist, and Naima Bashir, CSC Research Assistant, met with sophomores from Edison High School at Minneapolis Community and Technical College (MCTC). During the campus visit, Kim Mai, Admissions Recruiter/PSEO Coordinator for MCTC, gave a presentation about the college and talked to the students about PSEO opportunities at MCTC. Students were also given a tour of the campus. PCC members from IDDS and Zuhur Ahmed, host of the Somali Community Link radio show, served on a PSEO panel and shared their experiences with PSEO to the Edison sophomores.
PSEO panelists sharing their experience with Edison sophomores at MCTC.
Kim Mai,MCTC Admissions Recruiter/PSEO Coordinator, gives a tour of the campus to Edison sophomores.
Post Secondary Enrollment Options (PSEO) is a free college program available to Juniors and Seniors in high school. Students can earn both high school and college credit while participating in PSEO. For more information about PSEO please contact Sheena Thao (thao0165@umn.edu).
PSEO Communications Council
PSEO Communications Council is made up of current PSEO students from the Twin Cities. PSEO
Communications Council members help promote PSEO by sharing their
experience as a current student enrolled in this college prep program through various forms of outreach. PCC members have written short articles for local newspapers, presented to high school students in the Twin Cities, produced a radio ad on KMOJ Radio about PSEO, and much more.
If you are interested in becoming a PCC member or want more information, please contact Sheena Thao.
Click here to view the Today Show's coverage on dual enrollment programs.
Stretching Minds and Resources: 20 Years of Post Secondary Enrollment Options in Minnesota
To read a copy of this publication click: pseo2005
For more information about PSEO from the Minnesota Department of Education, click: pseoinfo
Please check back soon for an updated list of of institutions that offer PSEO!
PSEO in the media:
Newspapers reporting on the new Center for School Change report, "Stretching
Minds and Resources: 20 Years of Post Secondary Enrollment Options in
Minnesota"
Early college classes are underused, study says
More students could benefit by taking college courses in
high school.
By Jake Weyer
Duluth News Tribune
David Wrobleski doesn't qualify for financial aid yet, and his parents aren't
paying for the five-credit calculus course he's taking at the University of
Minnesota Duluth.
But as a post-secondary student, the East High School senior, 17, won't spend
a penny on tuition for the class and he'll get a taste of college before
entering the University of Minnesota in the Twin Cities next year.
"I thought I'd just push my way through the door and get started," he
said.
Researchers at the University of Minnesota's Center for School Change would
like to see more students like Wrobleski, according to a recent report. Center
Director Joe Nathan and other staff members spent nine months creating the
study, an analysis of the state's 20-year-old Post Secondary Enrollment Options
program.
The program allows high school juniors and seniors to take college-level
courses at Minnesota institutions for college and high school credit. The state
and school districts pick up the bill for tuition and books.
PSEO is largely successful, according to the study, which involved more than
1,000 current and former PSEO students from institutions throughout the state,
including UMD and the College of St. Scholastica. Lake Superior College also
offers PSEO, but it was not included in the report.
Most students in the program were satisfied, researchers found. But the
report also showed that parents and students do not receive enough information
about PSEO. More young people should be encouraged to participate in it and
other post-secondary options, the report stated.
"The bottom line is that post-secondary education is incredibly
underutilized," Nathan said.
Since PSEO began in 1985, about 110,000 students statewide have used it. Last
year, 7,471 students enrolled in the program, an increase from 3,523 students in
PSEO's first year. Nathan would like to see more.
In the Duluth school district, records show, fewer than 80 students took
courses at Lake Superior College, UMD or the College of St. Scholastica last
year.
"It's not well-advertised or well-known," said Nancy Marek, Wrobleski's
mother. "I'm pretty involved with his education, so that's how I know."
Rex Hein, director of curriculum, assessment and staff development for the
Duluth district, said PSEO courses are in the registration book each year and
parents are told of the options during orientation. But students are not urged
to take the courses, Hein said, because they aren't for everyone.
"Some kids really aren't ready for that kind of independence," Hein said.
To participate in PSEO, students need to meet requirements set by the
colleges and get the OK from their guidance councilors.
James Brandt, a guidance counselor at Denfeld High School, said most students
who participate are overachievers who can handle added responsibility. But when
taking on the stress of college life, students can become detached from what's
happening in their high school.
"We want to make sure they understand that they have to be mature enough to
stop in and see what's going on in school," Brandt said.
Counselors do not discourage students from taking PSEO, said East High School
guidance counselor Mark Zawacki.
"We're very fair and open and help every student get what they need to pursue
their dreams and goals," he said.
The Center for School Change study found that some students met with
unhelpful counselors who did not support PSEO. Zawacki said the cost of sending
students out of the district might be one reason.
For full-time PSEO students, the state pays tuition directly to the
university attended. The school district, which receives a portion of its state
money based on each student, receives substantially less from the state for
full-time PSEO students, who do not count toward enrollment.
The district receives normal state money for part-time PSEO students, but is
responsible for paying tuition, at no discount, for each credit taken.
Last year, the district paid about $200,000 for students who chose to take
part in PSEO, Hein said.
Harry Cottrell, director of extended campus programs at Lake Superior
College, said the institution does not recruit PSEO students largely because of
the cost to K-12 schools.
"That wouldn't make for a good relationship," he said. "It would be
counterproductive."
To improve the financial situation, the district started enhancing College in
the Schools, course offerings within the district that can be taken for college
credit. Other districts have done the same. Statewide College in the Schools
participation has jumped from 1,200 during the 1991-92 school year to more than
14,000 in 2004-05.
The study found that PSEO was largely responsible for the increase and the
program also has improved other aspects of K-12 education, such as the number of
standardized tests taken each year.
The Minnesota Department of Education and the Minnesota Office of Higher
Education need to take the lead in providing more information to families about
PSEO and its benefits, the report said.
The information also needs to be made available to communities of all
backgrounds and ethnicities.
The study found that last year, 67 percent of students using PSEO were
females. Black students accounted for4 percent of last year's participants,
Hispanics for 2 percent, American Indians for 1 percent and Asian students for7
percent.
Nathan said legislators, Minnesota Department of Education and Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities officials and community activists on Tuesday
will discuss how to address some of the report's findings.
He hopes more students will be able to see how useful PSEO and other options
can be.
"It's not enough to graduate from high school," Nathan said. "Don't assume
that by graduating from high school you're prepared for college, because you're
not. Good jobs require at least a two-year degree."
Wrobleski, who's interested in engineering or pre-medicine, is glad to be
getting a tough course out of the way, freeing up his future college schedule
for more electives or studying abroad.
"They do have a program to go to Iceland," he said. "And I'm really
interested in that." To read the full study, go to www.centerforschoolchange.org
JAKE WEYER can be reached weekdays at (218) 723-5342, (800) 456-8282 or by
e-mail at jweyer@duluthnews.com
Girls more likely to earn early credit
Study urges
Minnesota to get more high schoolers taking college-level courses
BY PAUL TOSTO
Pioneer Press
Minnesota's 20-year effort to get high school juniors and seniors into
college-level courses has helped thousands of students earn degrees. But the
state needs to get more teens to take the classes, especially boys and children
of color, a new report shows.
More than 110,000 high school students have enrolled in the Post-Secondary
Enrollment Options program. They are better prepared for college and earn
college credit, thus saving money.
It's a tremendous opportunity. Yet high school students who take advantage of
it remain disproportionately white, female and affluent, found a study by the
University of Minnesota's Center for School Change. Of the 6,000 public high
school juniors and seniors in the program last year, two-thirds were girls.
The report, to be released today, makes it clear that a Minnesota high school
diploma alone no longer guarantees a student is ready for college. It recommends
expanding the PSEO program. It also may accelerate Gov. Tim Pawlenty's plans to
get more high school students taking tougher courses.
Pawlenty won $11.6 million from the Legislature earlier this year for his
"Get Ready, Get Credit" initiative to expand college-level offerings in high
school and to test thousands of eighth- and 10th-graders to gauge their college
readiness.
"Students ought to recognize that just graduating (from high school) doesn't
mean they're fully ready for college," said Joe Nathan, director of the Center
for School Change.
Minnesota was the first state in the nation to let high school students apply
to take college courses, earn credit and take the courses for free. Eligible
students take classes at the U or at a two-or four-year college in Minnesota,
earning credit toward both a high school diploma and a college degree. Many
students can finish their first year of college free while still in high school.
The state pays for it by taking money for that student from the school
district and giving it to the college. That's caused friction with some high
schools. The report noted some students have experienced "resistance and
hostility from high school leadership and faculty." Still, the large majority of
schools support it, Nathan said.
PSEO and other college-level options have grown dramatically in the past 20
years. In 1986, 1,970 Minnesota high school students took Advanced Placement
tests offered by the nonprofit College Board, hoping to qualify for college
credit. Last year, 17,437 students took AP exams. International Baccalaureate, a
similar program offering rigorous coursework and exams, is taking hold in a
rising number of Twin Cities high schools.
The U report also noted the competition from PSEO has led many districts to
create their own "college in the schools" arrangements with local colleges.
Despite its successes, PSEO also offers a microcosm of the gaps between whites
and students of color, between low-income and affluent students, and,
increasingly, between girls and boys.
The gender shift already can be seen in college graduation data. Last year,
for the first time, women in Minnesota's colleges and universities took home
more degrees than men did in all categories. Women earned more than half the
doctorates and two-thirds of the master's degrees, according to the Minnesota
Higher Education Services Office.
Nationally, males made up 43 percent of higher education students in the
country in 2002, the lowest share in more than 100 years, according to the
newsletter Postsecondary Education Opportunity.
Latino, black and American Indian students also are underrepresented in the
PSEO program.
"There's a lot of kids that just don't know about it," said Cassandra
Sheppard, 20, a junior at Bethel University who took PSEO courses in high school
and works in Bethel's admissions office. "I've talked to sixth-graders,
fifth-graders, freshmen in high school" about PSEO and about getting into
college. "If you can reach them at an early point, it does wonders."
Paul Tosto covers higher education and can be reached at ptosto@pioneerpress.com or
651-228-2119. Online Go to www.centerforschoolchange.org to
read the report and learn more about postsecondary enrollment options.
Report urges broader PSEO
Colleges need to
advertise PSEO and admit more students, the report said.
By Cati Vanden Breul
Minnesota Daily
Twenty years ago Minnesota became the first state to allow high school
students to take college courses and get credit for free.
A state law allows students who are accepted into the Post-Secondary
Enrollment Options program to use state money that would have gone to their high
school, to pay instead for tuition and books at a participating higher education
institution.
But a report released Monday by the University's Center for School Change
suggests colleges might not be giving enough information about the program or
offering admission to as many students as they should.
The University limits the enrollment of new PSEO students to 450 for the fall
semester and admits an additional 50 students in the spring, said Danielle
Tisinger, director of the program at the Twin Cities campuses.
Typically, about 700 to 900 students apply in the fall and 100 to 200 in the
spring, she said.
Because of the enrollment cap, some qualified students might be turned away,
said Joe Nathan, co-author of the report.
Students who are not challenged in high school might not perform up to their
ability academically and will miss out on the opportunity to participate in PSEO
because of a low grade point average or class rank, he said.
"Some students don't have a strong GPA because they're bored stiff in high
school, but they absolutely blossom when they come here," Nathan said.
Students who participate in the PSEO program are more likely to graduate
college and tend to have higher GPAs than incoming first-year students, he
said.
But budget constraints have deterred the University from expanding the
program, Tisinger said.
"In an ideal world, there would be more opportunities available, but budgets
are always tricky," she said.
The University wouldn't want its services for students to decline because of
an expanded PSEO program, Tisinger said.
"We'd need to make sure we had appropriate staffing levels to work with the
expanded number of students," she said.
"The University also has a duty to its enrolled students; we'd want to make
sure that everybody had a good opportunity to get the classes they wanted."
But Nathan said expanding the program would help the University achieve two
of its main goals.
"We think this is one way to both diversify the University of Minnesota, and
also think it's a way to increase the graduation rates."
Good experience, but some students face obstacles
Students who
participate in the PSEO program are overwhelmingly satisfied with the
experience, according to the report.
Lindsay Anderson, a 2001 Carlson School of Management alumna, participated in
the PSEO program through Southwest Minnesota State University during her junior
and senior years of high school before transferring to the University once she
graduated.
Anderson, who was the valedictorian of her high school class, said enrolling
in college early gave her the opportunity to see what she was missing in high
school.
"The professors were so inspiring and challenging; they provided the
environment I was lacking in high school where I was bored, unchallenged and
unmotivated," she said.
But even though she remained active in her high school's golf and speech
teams, the school was not supportive of her decision to participate in the PSEO
program, she said.
"They thought of the school losing money, because the state funds go over to
the college as soon as I enrolled with them," Anderson said.
She said the school denied her acceptance into the National Honor Society
because she wasn't going to high school full time and threatened to take away
her valedictorian status even though she was first in her class.
"At that age, you just think that things are going to be fair. And if you're
a good student and in all of these activities, why wouldn't you be let in?"
Anderson said dealing with hostile teachers and administrators made her a
stronger person and taught her how to stand up for what she believed in.
"I just hope none of what I went through happens today. It just seemed so
crazy that they would hold back a student who was just trying to succeed," she
said.
But according to the report, at least 17 percent of PSEO participants still
have trouble with unhelpful or unsupportive high school teachers when they
choose to enroll in the program.
Nonwhites, men underrepresented
The report also found that men and
nonwhites are underrepresented in PSEO programs around the state.
Sixty-seven percent of PSEO participants are women, even though they only
make up 48 percent of the overall high school junior and senior class population
in the state.
"That finding was really unexpected," Nathan said.
Although the University's PSEO Web site is one of the best in the state, he
said, more information about the program needs to be provided to high school
students and their families in order to increase participation.
The report's authors are meeting today with state education officials and
community leaders to discuss the report's findings.
Legislators pore over PSEO study
The PSEO study looked at who is involved and what its benefits are
By Cati Vanden Breul
Minnesota Daily
Just a day after the University released a report pushing for expansion of
the Post-Secondary Enrollment Options program, education officials from around
the state met over box lunches to discuss the findings.
Dozens of officials, including state legislators, high school and college
administrators and community leaders gathered at the Minnesota Office of Higher
Education on Tuesday morning to share concerns and give suggestions on how to
expand access to the PSEO program.
The program is funded by the state and allows high school juniors and seniors
to enroll in college classes for free.
The report, conducted by the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, Center for
School Change, found that minority students and men were underrepresented in
PSEO programs across the state.
Joe Nathan, a co-author of the study, suggested two reasons some groups of
students showed low participation in the program.
Some students are not getting enough information about PSEO from their high
schools, he said, and others are being turned away because of low grade point
averages or class rank.
"Many students who are not particularly strong in high school but are given
the opportunity to take one or two courses at a college can be marvelous
students at the postsecondary level," Nathan said.
Students who are unchallenged in high school often fail to excel academically
and fall through the cracks when not allowed to explore their potential in a
more rigorous environment, he said.
Claudia Fuentes, a teaching specialist in the University's Chicano studies
department, said students' behaviors change when they're exposed to college.
"Some kids who were disengaged because they weren't being challenged went to
PSEO and their whole attitude toward learning changed," Fuentes said.
The report recommends that colleges create more space for students who don't
have the best academic record in high school but could succeed in college
courses.
Carlos Mariani-Rosa, a state representative and executive director of the
Minnesota Minority Education Partnership, said Minnesota needs to do a better
job of getting nonwhite students through college.
"Sometimes there are inherent barriers that get in the way of people taking
advantage of opportunities," Mariani-Rosa said.
Research shows students who get some experience with college at an early age
are more likely to attend, he said, so getting more minority students in the
PSEO program would boost their college participation.
The program also encourages low-income students to attend college because
many times PSEO participants finish their first two years of college without
incurring the cost.
But many high schools are not supportive of the program because they lose
some of their own state funding when students enroll in college courses, and
some schools are making it hard for students to join the program.
When a student participates in PSEO, the funding the state would have given
to the high school goes to the college to pay for tuition and books.
Administrators from some school districts said a more viable option might be
to create more "college in the schools" programs where college courses are
taught in high schools.
Star Tribune Editorial
20 years of a good school-choice option
December 19, 2005
Lindsay was bored and barely challenged in high school, so she spent her junior
and senior years taking courses at then-Southwest State University. Steven was
active at his high school, but took a few classes at Winona State to get a jump-start
on college. Both are now successful professionals who participated in Minnesota's
postsecondary enrollment options program (PSEO); they are also fine examples
of why the 20-year-old program should continue and grow.
Back in 1985, Minnesota was the first state to give students the option of
blending late high school and early college years. Through PSEO, juniors and
seniors can take college classes for free and earn credits toward both high
school diplomas and college degrees. Over the years, it has become clear that
the approach was prescient; a recent study by the Center for School Change at
the University of Minnesota found that students saved time and money, learned
more and felt more academically prepared for college. That's good for the students,
and for the system; producing better prepared students translates into spending
less on college "catch up" work.
As the report notes, the program has also encouraged other college-level options
in high school. In 1986, 1,970 Minnesota high school students took Advanced
Placement tests; last year, 17,437 students took AP exams. Because of competition
from PSEO, more state high schools are offering International Baccalaureate
classes and "college in the schools" partnerships.
Expanding such opportunities for teens is consistent with Gov. Tim Pawlenty's
push to get more high school students taking tougher courses. Earlier this year,
the Legislature approved the governor's "Get Ready, Get Credit" initiative to
expand college-level offerings in high school and to test thousands of eighth-
and 10th-graders to assess college readiness.
While PSEO has been successful, the study found that some improvements are
in order. More information should be available about the program. In addition,
the vast majority of the participants are female, white and middle- to upper-income;
more effort should be employed to expand the participation of others.
|