Credit: Community College League of California and Southwestern College
Students at Southwestern Community College in Chula Vista, California.

It’s all about accurately measuring college readiness — and annihilating the achievement gap in the process.

Assemblywoman Jacqui Irwin

For far too long, community colleges have relied on often inaccurate assessment tests that each year cause more than a million students nationwide to begin their postsecondary education in remedial courses they may not need. In California alone, more than 170,000 students are placed in remedial, or basic skills, math courses — with more than 110,000 never completing the math required to earn a degree. Even worse, data show students of color are more likely than white students to be sent to multiple remedial courses that do not count toward their college degree. What’s more, each remedial course increases the chances of a student throwing his or her arms up and dropping out.

With mounting evidence that remedial education is not always helpful in getting students to achieve their academic goals, a small but growing number of California colleges are implementing innovative programs to reform how a student’s skill level can be assessed, and what classes to place them in based on those assessments. Giving such efforts a boost, Gov. Jerry Brown last October signed landmark legislation that changes the way student readiness for college-level work is determined. As the author of the legislation that led to that law — Assembly Bill 705 — and as the head of the California Community Colleges system responsible for its implementation, we want to provide additional context to this important conversation.

Chancellor Eloy Ortiz Oakley

Recognizing that student preparedness for college is a primary indicator of success, California has long made improving remedial instruction in our community colleges a major priority. But study after study has concluded that assessment tests alone can be poor indicators of performance, as many — if not most — students do not properly prepare for them. To address this shortcoming, AB 705 requires community colleges to take into account high school coursework, high school grades, and high school grade point average when determining placement. That is because high school preparation, for the most part, provides students with a background strong enough to help them succeed in transfer-level courses. California students are far more prepared than assessment tests have acknowledged, and AB 705 recognizes this fact.

Overwhelmingly, research shows that most students should begin their educational progress with placement directly into transfer-level English and mathematics. At Cuyamaca College near San Diego, for example, underprepared students are often placed in college-level transfer classes and receive additional support — a process known as corequisite instruction — to ensure success. The result: dramatically higher completion rates for all racial and ethnic groups. What this model illustrates is that affirming students’ capabilities rather than their deficits is the first step toward building a pathway to college graduation; inaccurately blaming students rather than recognizing the consequences of our flaws in assessing capabilities is not the right way to proceed.

The basic engine of AB 705 does not strip faculty and colleges of their roles. It simply requires — given the evidence that remedial education is not always helpful in getting students to reach their academic goals — that colleges utilize assessment and placement practices that maximize the opportunity to enter and complete transfer-level coursework.

The Legislature and the California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office recognize that major systematic changes require engagement and support from key constituencies in the community college system. When AB 705 progressed through the legislative process last year, faculty, staff, administrators and student representatives were all involved in crafting language that was eventually signed by the governor.

Now the Chancellor’s Office has convened an AB 705 Implementation Advisory Committee comprising the same stakeholders to review the new law, understand the current research landscape and provide guidance to the chancellor on best practices for implementing it. To ensure colleges have adequate financial resources to support these changes, another law, Assembly Bill 1935 pending in the Legislature, would provide funding for tutoring programs to support students in transfer-level coursework.

In the end, the success of both AB 705 and AB 1935 is dependent on community college faculty supporting our students in and outside of the classroom. If there is additional support they need to make this effort successful, whether through professional development or in researching the impacts of our actions, we are committed to providing it.

•••

Jacqui Irwin (D-Camarillo) is a member of the California State Assembly.  Eloy Ortiz Oakley is chancellor of the California Community Colleges.

The opinions expressed in this commentary represent those of the author. EdSource welcomes commentaries representing diverse points of view. If you would like to submit a commentary, please review our guidelines and contact us.

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  1. Dan 3 years ago3 years ago

    Whoever created this bill knows absolutely nothing about community college education. This law, AB 705, is supposed to be about equity, but it will ostracize a lot of students. Explain this to me: How is a student who does not know fractions, percentages, and decimals suppose to pass Intermediate Algebra, otherwise known as Math 125? How is a student who does not know how to write a simple summary supposed to write a five-page … Read More

    Whoever created this bill knows absolutely nothing about community college education. This law, AB 705, is supposed to be about equity, but it will ostracize a lot of students. Explain this to me: How is a student who does not know fractions, percentages, and decimals suppose to pass Intermediate Algebra, otherwise known as Math 125? How is a student who does not know how to write a simple summary supposed to write a five-page essay? It makes absolutely no sense at all. Thank you for shattering students dreams of achieving equality through an education.

  2. Kyle 5 years ago5 years ago

    Remedial Education is a waste of time,money,energy,and resources in College!

  3. Curt Duffy 5 years ago5 years ago

    Sixty percent of students coming to California community colleges don't have the basic English and math skills needed to succeed in transfer-level course work. But instead of focusing on why the high schools aren't adequately preparing college-bound students, Assemblywoman Jacqui Irwin introduces legislation that essentially outlaws the very community college coursework that enables these students to finally succeed. Furthermore, she promotes this flawed legislation with faulty reasoning, asserting that remedial coursework--not poor high school preparation--is … Read More

    Sixty percent of students coming to California community colleges don’t have the basic English and math skills needed to succeed in transfer-level course work. But instead of focusing on why the high schools aren’t adequately preparing college-bound students, Assemblywoman Jacqui Irwin introduces legislation that essentially outlaws the very community college coursework that enables these students to finally succeed. Furthermore, she promotes this flawed legislation with faulty reasoning, asserting that remedial coursework–not poor high school preparation–is actually the reason these students don’t complete their educational programs. In the midst of this, decades of institutional knowledge about student placement and learning objectives are being discarded. California community colleges, once the last best chance for the academic success of the underprivileged, now face an existential crisis due to AB 705’s misguided efforts.

    Replies

    • Brandon 4 years ago4 years ago

      Remedial education costs millions in taxpayers dollars each year. That’s money could be better spent elsewhere!

  4. Ann 5 years ago5 years ago

    We’ll see and we better hope that the grade inflation that is so pervasive in high school (and, even community colleges and state universities) doesn’t leave us with a slew of unprepared college graduates.

  5. Leigh Anne Shaw 5 years ago5 years ago

    The points in this commentary are salient, but they completely ignore the importance of placement tests in aligning instruction to the needs of English language learners. While a portion of ELLs come to community colleges via the high schools and have GPAs and transcripts, far more ELLs do not; they arrive from countries who do not use GPAs, whose English language learning may have spanned a couple of months or a couple of years, … Read More

    The points in this commentary are salient, but they completely ignore the importance of placement tests in aligning instruction to the needs of English language learners. While a portion of ELLs come to community colleges via the high schools and have GPAs and transcripts, far more ELLs do not; they arrive from countries who do not use GPAs, whose English language learning may have spanned a couple of months or a couple of years, and whose knowledge of American culture (an important element to language-learning) may be limited.
    While one would hope that Senator Irwin and Chancellor Oakley would not *cause* an ELL to have his/her unique language-learning needs ignored by eliminating placement tests for ESL, there is a strong voice on the AB 705 implementation task force that would like to do away with placement tests entirely. This would be detrimental to the ability of quality ESL programs to provide appropriate language instruction to those who need it.
    Please take care in future commentary to acknowledge the unique needs of English language learners and not deny them their rights to become proficient in the English language before being placed into transfer level coursework. The inequity and disproportionate impact that occurs with placement into remedial English and Math is not the same for foreign-born learners who are learning a foreign language that will be the most important measure of how successful they will be in college and career.
    English language learners are important contributors to our state, and ignoring their needs harms them.