Alliance President On Lou Dobbs Radio

On April 28, Alliance for Excellent Education President Bob Wise appeared on The Lou Dobbs (Radio) Show (mp3) to discuss the new graduation rate regulations proposed by the Department of Education.

Click here to listen(mp3)...

Raising the Grade

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Alliance President Speaks At White House

Image of White HouseAt an April 30 briefing at the White House, Alliance for Excellent Education President Bob Wise discussed the economic impact of the nation’s low graduation rate, explained that the federal government has a key role to play in high school reform, and called on Congress to address the nation’s high school dropout crisis.

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 No Child Left Behind Reauthorization

NCLB ReauthorizationThe No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) has helped to focus the nation’s attention on the unacceptable achievement gap and the imperative of improving outcomes for all students, especially the most disadvantaged. But the needs of secondary schools are almost ignored in NCLB; therefore federal policy does little to support effective change. Further, little federal funding ever reaches high schools. NCLB reauthorization offers the opportunity to develop an appropriate role for the federal government that supports middle and high school reform across the country. 

Read more about how NCLB affects high schools, the Alliance’s call for reauthorization, recommendations, Congressional testimony, and information about key pieces of high school legislation.

  • Businesses see skilled grads as critical to area's future
    Arizona Daily Star
    May 13, 2008

    An October 2007 report by the Washington, D.C.-based Alliance for Excellent Education showed a $7.1 billion loss of lifetime wages for the nearly 28,000 dropouts in Arizona last year. State households would have gained $1.4 billion in accumulated wealth if those household heads had finished school, the report said.

  • Grade inflation adds to woes, especially in middle schools
    Arizona Daily Star
    May 12, 2008

    In a 2007 report by the Washington, D.C.-based Alliance for Excellent Education, experts said Arizona would save hundreds of millions of dollars a year in crime, healthcare and remedial-education costs if about 28,000 students hadn't dropped out last year.

  • Wise Right About U.S. High Schools
    The Intelligencer/Wheeling News-Register (WV)
    May 12, 2008

    Former West Virginia Gov. Bob Wise is pointing out something that recently has landed some candidates for public office in hot water: “Those low-skill jobs that paid a livable wage are gone and they’re gone across most of the country.”

Raising the Grade by the Alliance's Bob Wise Released

On May 2, Raising the Grade: How High School Reform Can Save Our Youth and Our Nation, written by Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia was released.

In the latest installment of “Wise Words,” Governor Wise draws attention to the reason why he wrote Raising the Grade -- the crisis in America’s high schools that sees over a million students failing to graduate every year.

Raising the Grade describes the alarming cost of the high school crisis and informs citizens, educators, and policymakers about what they can do to ensure that all students receive a quality high school education that prepares them for a successful future.

Click here to order the book.

Find A Dropout Factory In Your State

Click on Image for Larger VersionOfficial “dropout” statistics neither accurately count nor report the number of students who do not graduate from high school. Read the Associated Press article on "dropout factories," the almost 2,000 high schools identified by Johns Hopkins University researchers that lose more than 40 percent of their students between 9th and 12th grades.

Alliance for Excellent Education President Bob Wise appeared on NPR’s The Diane Rehm Show to talk about dropout factories. Listen to archived audio of the program.

While not a graduation rate, a school’s “promoting power” is a good indicator of how well schools are educating their students. See how high schools across the country perform by going to the Promoting Power database . High schools with promoting power less than 60 percent are considered dropout factories. To learn more about the confusing ways that graduation rates are calculated, read the Alliance’s fact sheets on Understanding Graduation Rates.

Quote of the Day

...we want states to foster world-quality teaching, rigorous coursework, and creative, innovative structures so high school students remain engaged, excited, and-most of all-enrolled. At the end of the day, we want our high schools to be more than way stations. A diploma should be more than a glorified certificate of attendance. It should be a road map to a prosperous, purposeful future.


— former U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige, Second annual National High School Leadership Summit, December 2, 2004

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Federal Policy

Federal government leadership is critical in advancing secondary school reform, but current federal policy and funding do not effectively support improving achievement in the nation’s middle and high schools.

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Learn about the Ten Key Elements that every high school should have in place to ensure that all of its students are successful.

 

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