Students
Say High Schools Let Them Down
By MICHAEL JANOFSKY
Published: July 16, 2005
DES MOINES, July 15 -
A large majority
of high school students say their class work is not very difficult,
and almost two-thirds say they would work harder if courses were more
demanding or interesting, according to an online nationwide survey of
teenagers conducted by the National Governors Association.
The survey, being
released on Saturday by the association, also found that fewer than
two-thirds believe that their school had done a good job challenging
them academically or preparing them for college. About the same number
of students said their senior year would be more meaningful if some
of their courses could be counted toward college credit.
Taken together,
the electronic responses of 10,378 teenagers painted a somber picture
of how students rate the effectiveness of their schools in preparing
them for the future. The survey also appears to reinforce findings of
federal test results released on Thursday that showed that high school
seniors made almost no progress in reading and math in the first years
of the decade. During that time, elementary school students made significant
gains.
"I might have
expected kids to say, 'Don't give us more work; high school is tough
enough,' " said Gov. Mark Warner of Virginia, a Democrat and chairman
of the governors association, which opens a three-day summer meeting
here on Saturday."Instead," Mr. Warner said, "what we
got are high school students actually willing to be stretched more.
I didn't think we'd get much of that."
The governors'
survey was conducted as part of the association's effort to examine
public high schools and devise strategies for improving them. Mr. Warner
has made high school reform his priority as chairman of the association.
His term ends on Monday, when Gov. Mike Huckabee of Arkansas, a Republican,
is scheduled to succeed him. While a vast majority of respondents in
the survey, 89 percent, said they intended to graduate, fewer than two-thirds
of those said they felt their schools did an "excellent" or
"good" job teaching them how to think critically and analyze
problems.
Even among the
remaining 11 percent, a group of 1,122 that includes teenagers who say
they dropped out of high school or are considering dropping out, only
about one in nine cited "school work too hard" as a reason
for not remaining through graduation. The greatest percentage of those
who are leaving, 36 percent, said they were "not learning anything,"
while 24 percent said, "I hate my school."
Experts in education
policy said the survey results were consistent with other studies that
have shown gaps between what students learn in high school and what
they need for the years beyond."A lot of business people and politicians
have been saying that the high schools are not meeting the needs of
kids," said Barbara Kapinus, a senior policy analyst for the National
Education Association. "It's interesting that kids are saying it,
too.