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Superintendent

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Superintendent s Panel on Excellence in Adult Education – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Superintendent


1
Superintendents Panel on Excellence in Adult
Education
2
What Is Adult Education?
  • The Adult Education Program provides access to
    educational opportunity for out of school youth
    and adults who need
  • Instruction for a high school diploma
  • Basic foundation skills in reading, writing,
    math, and critical thinking
  • English language acquisition
  • To be able to
  • Earn a high school diploma
  • Continue education/training at postsecondary
    level
  • Enhance employment/work opportunities
  • Obtain citizenship
  • Be a better parent and help their children
    succeed

3
Maryland Goals forAdult Education
  • Universal Access
  • High Standards of programs and individual
    educational attainment
  • Program/course content aligned to learner, labor
    market and community needs
  • Active partnerships to build infrastructure for
    quality adult education service

4
What was the Charge to the Panel?
  • Review research on elements of quality in adult
    education
  • Examine the adequacy of resources devoted to
    adult education in Maryland
  • Analyze the unique adult education cost pressures
    associated with students with special
    characteristics, and with the diverse service
    delivery system
  • Examine the relationship between the need for
    adult education and the resources
  • Provide the State Superintendent with guidance
    and recommendations for adequate adult education
    funding and a funding appropriation formula
  • Develop a base funding unit

5
The Need for Adult Education
  • 927,264 need literacy skills, a high school
    diploma, or English Language skills
  • 57 are not in the labor force
  • 69 are in prime work years, ages 16 to 59
  • 25 are at or below 125 of poverty

6
The Need for Adult Education - Out of School
Youth
  • 299,936 out of school youth, ages 16 24
  • 211,066 completed 9 or more years of school
    without earning a diploma
  • 14 are at or below 100 percent of poverty

7
Maryland Adult Education
  • High Performing
  • Consistently meets and exceeds performance
    expectations.
  • Has earned federal incentive funds for the state
    for the past three years.
  • Demand seriously outstrips capacity
  • Current seats for only 3-5 of the target
    population
  • Annual waiting lists for instruction of 5,000
    students

8
Findings
  • Adult education is an education issue and its an
    economic issue.
  • It prepares workers to help Maryland to succeed
    in the global economy
  • It equips parents to prepare and support their
    children to be successful in school
  • It helps reduce future costs in incarceration,
    welfare, unemployment, and health care costs

9

Findings
  • Marylands investment in adult education is not
    competitive with other states
  • Maryland ranks 18th out of 18 East Coast states
    in state investment
  • Maryland falls 90 below the average Eastern
    states 428 expenditure per student
  • Virginia had 14,000 students pass the GED Tests
    in FY04, Maryland had 5,450

10
Findings
  • Per student expenditure is inadequate to achieve
    expected increases in student and program
    outcomes
  • MD invests only 42 per student, the cost of a
    GED textbook
  • Average annual contact hours per student is well
    below the goal
  • Current funding does not support a stable, well
    qualified, professional workforce for
    instruction or instructional leadership
  • 27 of administrators are part time
  • 85 of teachers are part time

11
Findings
  • Adult Education requires partnerships to succeed
  • Federal, State, Local Government
  • Business
  • Local School Systems, Community Colleges
    Community Based Organizations

12
Findings
  • A proposed 74 reduction Federal funding for FY
    07 puts Marylands program at risk
  • Eliminates
  • Services in 11 of 24 counties
  • Seats for 18,000 current students
  • Local jobs for 600 teachers
  • Parent instruction at 34 Even Start, Judy
    Centers, Family Support Centers
  • The statewide network of professional development
    for teachers

13
Findings
  • Its the states role to provide
  • adequate funding to support the
  • achievement of state and national standards and
    performance outcomes by all the organizations it
    funds.

14
What is the Payoff? Learning Gains to Earnings
Gains The Investment in Adult Education Pays Off
  • 76 of students with goal of obtaining a High
    School Diploma achieved their goal
  • 62 of tested participants made significant
    educational gains at least one grade level
    equivalent
  • 16,503 high school diplomas awarded over the past
    five years

15
What is the Payoff? Learning Gains to Earnings
Gains The Investment in Adult Education Pays Off
  • Wage gains of 1,817 to 2,579 within 18 months
    of program exit for employed students
  • Every dollar invested in adult education yielded
    a return of 3.15 to Maryland economy in
    increased earnings (FY04)
  • Local economies netted 45 million in annual
    earnings gains (FY04)
  • People with a high school diploma earn 7,216
    more a year in wages (U.S. Department of Commerce)

16
Recommendations
  • Stepping Up To The Plate

17
Recommendation 1
  • Increase the Investment in Adult Education
  • Create in statute, a state appropriation formula
    for adult education

18
What Investment Is Needed?
  • A research based prototype program
  • 120 instructional hours per learner
  • Enrollment of 40,000 students annually
  • A 50/50 state and local share of the cost
    (federal funding reducing the required
    local share)
  • A per student funding of 1,803
  • Phase in over four to five years
  • Cost Additional state investment for the fully
    phased-in appropriation formula - 26.5 Million

19
Recommendation 2
  • Consolidate All State Funding for Adult
    Education

20
Recommendation 3
Establish a Plan and Incentives to Encourage
Workplace Education Partnerships with Business
21
Recommendation 4
  • Develop and Publish an annual State Performance
    Report on the Adult Education Program

22
Can you support the Panel recommendations and
help us to implement them?
23
Discussion Questions
  • What is the impact of undereducated adults and
    out of school youth on your business/organization
    ?
  • How can you step up to the plate?
  • How should the GWIB respond to the Panel
    recommendations?

24
Superintendents Panel on Excellence in Adult
Education
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