4-state school plan seeks innovations
Published: December 15, 2008
Updated: December 15, 2008
AUGUSTA, Maine—Four New England states, including Rhode Island, are forming a partnership that hopes to boost graduation and decrease dropout rates, while putting more emphasis on learning experiences outside the traditional classroom.
With a $1 million grant, the New England Secondary School Consortium will scrutinize current practices and hear details of innovations taken by schools in the participating states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island.
Besides boosting the graduation rate to 90 percent and decreasing the dropout rate to less than 1 percent, the consortium has set goals to bolster enrollment of students in two- or four-year colleges to 80 percent.
In addition, it seeks to reduce the need for college remedial courses to 5 percent and ensure that more students who enter college graduate.
“As a state and a region, one of the greatest challenges before us is improving student performance, particularly in secondary grades,“ Rhode Island Gov. Don Carcieri said in a written statement Monday.
The consortium envisions high schools in which students conduct research in their communities, acquire skills through internships and take online and on-campus college courses
The $1 million grant for the consortium comes from the from Nellie Mae Education Foundation, the largest philanthropy in New England focused exclusively on education. It includes a $500,000 partnership grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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