Monthly Archives: February 2012

Scaling the Best of Early College REQUIRES EVIDENCE

“Are EC students college-ready? How well do EC students do in college? Do EC graduates complete college at higher rates?

These are some of the recurring questions that face those in the EC community.

Join in this unique conversation among EC practitioners and researchers. Help to identify the key elements of evidence and shape the research agenda.

Sponsors: Jobs for the Future and the Middle College National Consortium

Partners:
Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia
Educate Texas
Foundation of California Community Colleges Gateway to College
Knowledgeworks
NCREST
SECME
SERVE
Utah Partnership Foundation
Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation

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Fulfilling Promises: Vol. 18 No. 1 – Winter 2012

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Combining Theories for the Practicing Educator

Developing enlightened educational theories, to enable conceptual ideas to flourish within the practicing classroom, ensures the continuation of learning. Theory and practice are symbiotic relationships, which if presented correctly can meld vision and mission into a school’s culture.

Posted in Newsletter - Winter 2012 - Vol. 18 | No. 1 | Comments closed

The Key Cognitive Strategies, C-PAS, and the Common Core State Standards

CCSS, PARCC, SMARTER, KCS, EPIC, C-PAS* – are all these acronyms giving you a headache? Today, the educational focus is on college and career readiness and all of the preceding acronyms, each in their own way, aim to prepare graduating high school students for their next steps. And as we struggle to keep up, we may well wonder if there is any commonality and continuity in all of these. And we also may wonder where the work of MCNC (another acronym) fits in all of this. Here’s a look at a little history of what MCNC has been doing.

Posted in Newsletter - Winter 2012 - Vol. 18 | No. 1 | Comments closed

Consortium Matters: The First National Early College Jam

The level of commitment was evident in the passion with which everyone spoke about the students and the work. What quickly became evident as the registrations rolled in the weeks before the Jam is that despite many local adaptations, there is almost unanimous agreement about the program components necessary for students to be successful: engaging demanding academic work coupled with a very high level of student support sets up the expectations for hard work for all students.

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