Dr. Bob gives practical and insightful advice that will develop your skills and the edge to become really ready for college.

Showing posts with label study skills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label study skills. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The problem of college readiness and why remedial courses don't usually work


LA Times reports: 760,000 Cal State applications, but [college] readiness a problem

Let me be clear: un-readiness among college students is not just a CSU problem. It's a problem for everyone. I'm referring to the Cal State article only because it's recent and provides a jumping off point to discuss today's topic: the seriousness of the un-readiness and why remedial courses don't usually work.

The number of undergraduate applications for Cal State’s fall 2014 class was the largest ever. But, according to the Times, only about 56% of students "are ready to tackle college-level English and math." It's an improvement, 42% tested proficient in 2009.

In 2012, Cal State instituted a program, Early Start, part of "an overarching policy goal of improving college readiness." One facet of Early Start provides remedial courses to help students whose placement exam scores show they lack proficiency in math or English.

College un-readiness: A nationwide problem.  
In this instance, 44% of 760,000 applicants need remedial work in basic courses. It’s these kinds of statistics that prompted me to write my book about “how to get ready” for college. A major theme running through the book? Most students don’t know how to “study” and "learn"(acquire knowledge.)

Learning: a lost art.
·         A huge number of students who get great high school grades get them because they cram — and then quickly forget the bits and pieces of crammed information in a matter of days. When crammers get to college and don’t have the background knowledge the professor expects, crammers will pay a steep price. But teens don’t know that.
·        At the other end of the spectrum are students who are frustrated in courses because they “don’t get it.” Why? They don’t know “how” to get it. Clueless as learners, they lack
the means to overcome the learning barrier and so give-up on the course.
·         Who are the “studiers”? Almost 7% of college-bound high school seniors study 16 or more hours a week, a little more than 2 hours a day.

66% of college-bound h.s. seniors study fewer than 5 hours a week.
What’s more, the majority of students are still using immature study techniques, woefully inadequate in handling courses that have grown progressively more difficult.

So we offer students remedial coursework. Seems logical. But presenting the material in a remedial way will not achieve the hoped-for result. Why? Students are likely to know no more about “studying” when they start college than they did in high school.

Students need help learning how to learn.
I had originally thought about calling my book “Filling the Hole in Your Head.” The phrase captured perfectly the current students’ perception of “learning.” They sit in class, and the teacher "pours knowledge” through a funnel into a hole in their head. (The concept still lives in an illustration that begins a chapter in my book called, How, exactly, to “use” your head.) Students believe that if they “listen” in class, they will learn. They believe that learning is passive.

No. The brain needs exercise. It, too, needs to lift weights and stretch. That's study. No one “pours” knowledge into student heads. Today’s students don’t get that. They believe that if they aren’t learning in class, then the teacher's not doing a good job.
 
We have to teach students how to learn — and that learning, by its very nature, takes time and effort.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced last year that the US now ranks 16th globally in the number of college degrees attained. It’s time to do something about that. And teaching students how to study and learn rests at the foundation of this effort.  

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Strength, stamina, and study — a “must”

The truth is that far too many high school students are studying no more than they did in middle school. Ask them how many hours each week they really study, and the response is often, “It all depends.” And that means it all depends on whether or not a test is coming up. Or they might say “It depends on how much homework I have.”

It’s a telltale sign that when the student’s homework is done, “study time” ends.

Students feel that, as is often the case in grade school, simply doing homework is “enough.”  They are completing their assignments. Then, if they don’t do well on tests, they say “I’m just not good at that” —“that” being history, math, foreign language, or whatever the subject may be. Students don’t really see the relationship between not studying and getting lower grades.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Twitter Party Tonight: Preparing Students for the 21st Century Workforce

Join Dr. Bob and other experts for a fun and engaging Twitter Party, hosted by Educationworld.com. Dr. Bob will talk about preparing students for the 21st century workforce. Tweet your questions and comments to Dr. Bob, the expert on college readiness. He will share how students can become really ready to succeed in the today’s competitive and global work environment. We hope to see you there!
When: January 5, 2012 – 8-9 p.m. EST
Where: Twitter
What: A Twitter party, intended to help and inform high school educators and parents about what skills are needed to prepare students for today’s work environment.
Official Hashtag: #edworld
More information: Edworld Twitter Party Info


Sunday, May 16, 2010

Interview with WPR's Kathleen Dunn

Listen to Dr. Bob talk with Kathleen Dunn and address listeners' questions about preparing for college in high school.


Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Dr. Bob's recent TV interview about his new book



With anchor Portia Young
Broadcast on WISN ABC 12 in Milwaukee