Iris Palmer
Director, Community Colleges
Nationwide, the majority of community college students are required to take at least one remedial course. Unfortunately, less than one quarter of those same students not only fail to finish a degree, but never took the required college-level class for which they sought remediation.
In the New America report, “How to Fix Remediation at Scale,” Iris Palmer, Senior Policy Analyst with New America’s Education Policy Program, reviews how leaders at community colleges in Colorado, Georgia, Indiana, Tennessee and West Virginia successfully revamped their remediation systems.
One of the key factors in the extensive redesign in each state was the introduction of co-requisite remediation. With this type of remediation, students receive learning support while taking college-level courses. As a result, students got the extra help they needed, while speeding up the progression of their degree. This is different from the traditional model of students being required to take remedial classes before their college-level courses.
“States and systems play a key role in fixing remediation. Highlighting their actions provides a roadmap for others who want to undertake these reforms,” said Palmer.
The
states used these tools to scale the reform:
The
community colleges found that this change made a big difference. Students who
placed into remediation were taking college-level classes earlier and passing
those courses at the same rate as their peers. The promise of co-requisite
remediation is catching on—thirteen additional states have committed to implementing
this model through Complete College America’s Scaling Co-requisite Initiative.
The full
report is available here.