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Four indicators educators can use
to identify potential dropouts in 6th grade
Students who are at high risk for dropping out of school can be
identified as early as 6th grade with four simple indicators, according to a
study of 13,000 Philadelphia school district students recently published in
Educational Psychologist.
"Many students in urban schools become disengaged at the start of the middle grades, which greatly reduces the odds that they will eventually graduate," write the researchers. "We use longitudinal analysis--following almost 13,000 students from 1996 until 2004--to demonstrate how four predictive indicators reflecting poor attendance, misbehavior, and course failures in 6th grade can be used to identify 60% of the students who will not graduate from high school." Many reform efforts have focused on making middle-grades schools more developmentally appropriate and more academically excellent, the researchers write, but much less attention has been paid to heading off student disengagement and lack of motivation, which play a big role in the nation's graduation rate crisis. Subscribe to Educational Research Newsletter. Using data that is readily collected by any school, the researchers identified the following four indicators that educators could use as early as middle school to identify students likely to drop out:
"We can regard these findings as hopeful because they indicate that, in 6th grade, most students who can be identified at high risk for failing to graduate are only demonstrating difficulty in one academic subject and/or in one behavioral realm rather than having difficulties in many areas as is typical of many struggling high school students," the authors write. Behavior a 5th predictor Unsatisfactory final behavior marks in any subject in 6th grade, a 5th indicator, did not quite meet the criterion for predictive power (75% failing to graduate), but had a high yield--50% of nongraduates received a poor behavior mark, the researchers note. "Receiving a final unsatisfactory behavior grade in any subject in the 6th grade significantly reduced the chances that 6th graders would graduate from the school district within 1 year of expected graduation," the researchers write. "In addition to being a significant warning flag in and of itself, unsatisfactory behavior magnifies the damaging effects of course failure on students' prospects of graduating." View recent issues of Educational Research Newsletter. Course failure was a better predictor of not graduating than were low test scores, the researchers found. End-of-5th grade test scores in reading and math were poor predictors of dropping out, supporting data from other studies that found that end-of-6th grade test scores were poor predictors of dropping out, according to the researchers.
Being either a special education student or an English language learner reduced students' chances of graduating, but these indicators fell short of the 75% threshold for predictive power, the authors write.
The authors, Robert Balfanz and Douglas MacIver of the Center for the Social Organization of Schools at Johns Hopkins University, and Liza Herzog of the Philadelphia Education Fund, have worked to develop and evaluate the Talent Development Middle Grades (TMG) and Talent Development High School comprehensive reform models. These models emphasize effective and engaging instruction, substantial extra help and organizational changes that increase the communal nature of schools, the authors write. The programs promote use of small learning communities and teacher teams for creating learning environments where students and teachers come to know and care about one another. Sign up to receive free research updates, please click here. To identify school factors that influence student attendance, behavior, and effort, in an earlier survey, researchers asked 2,334 5th-8thgrade students about their perceptions of their math classes and teachers . They identified five factors that are predictive of student effort or academic achievement in the middle grades:
Interventions for flagged students
Typically a teacher is assigned the responsibility of "shepherding" unresponsive students by building more personal relationships, checking in frequently with students and giving them immediate feedback, the authors write. When students miss school, the shepherding might involve calling the student each day of absence to find out why the student has missed school. The researchers note that shepherding may be needed for 15-20% of students, and 5-10% of students may need more intensive, clinical types of supports. "Preventing Student Disengagement and Keeping Students on the Graduation Path in Urban Middle-Grades Schools: Early Identification and Effective Interventions," by Robert Balfanz, Liza Herzog and Douglas MacIver, Educational Psychologist, Volume 42, Published in ERN November 2007 Volume 20, Number 8
It seems to me that poor grades and lack of motivation/disengagement go hand-in-hand. I wonder if researchers looked into the cause of this disengagement and how much had to do with outside influences (i.e. general lack of motivation from parents, problems in the family that are carried into schools, lack of sleep, etc.) Lesley Hollister Web Site Design By Flying Change Webs & Graphics |