A new report suggests a high school graduation crisis could be coming in Ohio. More than a third of the state鈥檚 high schoolers have not yet scored what they need to in order to get their diploma. Education leaders and teachers believe the clock is ticking down to that potential disaster, and are begging for help.
鈥淚 have a 15-year-old daughter who鈥檚 not real good in math.鈥
John Haswell is worried about his daughter who鈥檚 a sophomore at Shadyside High School in eastern Ohio.
鈥淲hen I saw her end-of-course exam on Geometry, her score of a 1, I knew immediately we were in trouble.鈥
Haswell鈥檚 daughter and every other high schooler in Ohio all have new standards to meet in order to graduate in 2018 and every year after that. Instead of the old standardized test known as the Ohio Graduation Test, students must accumulate a certain score among 7 different tests.
Each test gets a student up to 5 points. To graduate a student needs 18 points, but must also reach a minimum amount of points in each subject.
Haswell鈥檚 not just a father, but he鈥檚 also the superintendent of Shadyside Local Schools. He says his daughter is not alone in struggling to stay above water.
鈥淎nd then I started looking at my kids, our school, I looked at the data from them and about 45% of my daughter鈥檚 sophomore class at Shadyside is behind at graduation points.鈥
鈥淗ey, hey, ho, ho the high stakes tests have got to go!鈥
Haswell and hundreds of other school administrators gathered outside the Statehouse to protest these standards and voice their concern about the possible graduation crisis.
The Ohio Education Association, the state鈥檚 largest teachers union, joined in on the rally. That group鈥檚 vice president, Scott DiMauro, says education leaders need to step in and fix what he calls a problematic policy.
鈥淲e鈥檙e confronting the reality that we鈥檝e got a whole lot of students through no fault of their own who are at risk of not graduating next year because of a policy decision that wasn鈥檛 very well thought through,鈥 said DiMauro.
Two blocks from that rally, the State Board of Education was getting a glimpse of just how dire the situation might be for Ohio鈥檚 high school students.
A report looking at the class of 2018 showed that only 65% are on track to meet the standards needed to graduate. That means more than a third of current high school juniors need some type of remediation in order to graduate on time.
As DiMauro explains, that creates a whole other stress on students.
鈥淭he other problem that you have is that because these tests are tied to specific courses you鈥檝e got a whole lot of students that are passing those courses, moving on to other subjects but then they have to retake tests in classes they鈥檙e no longer taking,鈥 DiMauro said.
Board of Education Member Stephanie Dodd says she and her fellow board members understand the urgency of the issue.
鈥淭here absolutely are a significant number of students that are not on track to graduate.鈥
Dodd believes there鈥檚 enough support from the board to change the standards and bring that required accumulated score down from 18, but says it needs to be a thoughtful change.
鈥淚f we were to lower those points from 18 to a different number what would that look like in terms of graduation and how would that impact our districts,鈥 said Dodd.
There are two other paths to graduation aside from these 7 tests. One is to earn credits with career-field experience and the other is to score well on either the SAT or ACT test.
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