Building Bridges to Postsecondary Training for Low-Skill Adults: Outcomes of Washington State's I-BEST Program. CCRC Brief. Number 42.

Davis Jenkins, M. Zeidenberg, Gregory S. Kienzl
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引用次数: 27

Abstract

Each year, community colleges, schools, and community organizations offer basic skills instruction to more than 2.5 million adults with limited skills and education. Such programs include Adult Basic Education (ABE) and GED preparation programs for individuals who do not have a high school credential and English-as-a-SecondLanguage (ESL) programs for persons with limited proficiency in English. Yet few of these students advance successfully to college-level education and training, even when they attend a basic skills program offered by a community college. Not doing so limits the potential of these individuals to secure jobs that pay family-supporting wages and that offer opportunities for career advancement. Integrated Basic Education and Skills Training, or I-BEST, is an innovative program created to address this problem. First piloted in 2004-05, I-BEST was developed by the community and technical colleges in Washington State to increase the rate at which adult basic skills students enter and succeed in postsecondary occupational education and training. Under the I-BEST model, basic skills instructors and career-technical faculty jointly design and teach collegelevel occupational, or what in Washington State are called “workforce,” courses for adult basic skills students. Instruction in basic skills is thereby integrated with instruction in college-level career-technical skills. This model challenges the conventional notion that basic skills instruction should be completed by students prior to starting college-level courses. The approach thus offers the potential to accelerate the transition of adult basic skills students into college programs. This Brief, which summarizes a longer paper, presents findings from a CCRC study that investigated the outcomes of students who participated in the program. The study compared, over a two-year tracking period, the educational outcomes of I-BEST students with those of other basic skills students, including students who comprised a particularly apt comparison group — those non-I-BEST basic skills students who nonetheless enrolled in at least one workforce course in academic year 2006-07, the period of enrollment examined in the study. The analyses controlled for observed differences in background characteristics and enrollment patterns of students in the sample. We examined data on more than 31,000 basic skills students in Washington State, including nearly 900 I-BEST participants.
为低技能成人搭建通往高等教育的桥梁:华盛顿州I-BEST项目的成果。CCRC简短。42号。
每年,社区学院、学校和社区组织为250多万技能和教育程度有限的成年人提供基本技能指导。这些项目包括针对没有高中文凭的个人的成人基础教育(ABE)和GED准备项目,以及针对英语能力有限的人的英语作为第二语言(ESL)项目。然而,这些学生中很少有人能成功地进入大学水平的教育和培训,即使他们参加了社区大学提供的基本技能课程。如果不这样做,就会限制这些人获得工作的潜力,这些工作既能支付养家糊口的工资,又能提供职业发展的机会。综合基础教育和技能培训(I-BEST)是一项旨在解决这一问题的创新项目。I-BEST于2004- 2005年首次试点,由华盛顿州的社区和技术学院开发,旨在提高成人基本技能学生进入高等职业教育和培训并取得成功的比率。在I-BEST模式下,基本技能教师和职业技术教师共同设计和教授大学水平的职业课程,或者华盛顿州所谓的“劳动力”课程,为成人基本技能学生提供课程。因此,基本技能的教学与大学水平的职业技能教学相结合。这种模式挑战了传统观念,即基本技能教学应该由学生在开始大学水平的课程之前完成。因此,这种方法提供了加速成人基本技能学生向大学课程过渡的潜力。本摘要总结了一篇较长的论文,介绍了CCRC研究的结果,该研究调查了参加该计划的学生的结果。在为期两年的跟踪期内,该研究比较了I-BEST学生与其他基本技能学生的教育成果,其中包括一个特别适合的比较组的学生——那些没有I-BEST基本技能的学生,尽管如此,他们在2006-07学年至少参加了一门劳动力课程,这是研究调查的入学期间。分析控制了样本中学生背景特征和入学模式的观察差异。我们调查了华盛顿州31,000多名掌握基本技能的学生的数据,其中包括近900名I-BEST参与者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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