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Five Foundations Launch $14 Million Initiative to Boost Success in

Math at Community Colleges

 

The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the

Lumina Foundation for Education, and the Bill & Melinda Gates and William and Flora Hewlett foundations

have announced the launch of a two-year, $14 million initiative to improve success in mathematics among

community college students.  Led by the Carnegie Foundation, the initiative aims to double the proportion

of community college students who within one year of continuous enrollment are mathematically prepared

to succeed in further academic study or pursuits, regardless of their limitations in language, literacy, and/or

math or their ability to navigate college. To accomplish the goal, nineteen partner institutions in five states

will work to develop two mathematics "pathways": a Statistics Pathway designed to help developmental

math students progress through transferable college statistics

 

in a year, and a one-semester Mathematical Literacy Pathway that replaces elementary and intermediate algebra

followed by a college-level math course.  As many as 60 percent of students enrolled in U.S. community colleges

must take at least one remedial course — also called developmental education — to build their basic academic skills.

The vast majority of community college students referred to developmental math do not successfully complete the

sequence of required courses, and many leave college.  "Developmental mathematics courses become a roadblock

to success for our nation's community college students," said Carnegie Foundation president Anthony S. Bryk.

"We are wasting precious human potential. The high cost of denied dreams and unfulfilled aspirations is unacceptable.

Rather than a gateway to a college education and a better life, mathematics has become an unyielding gatekeeper."

 

“Five Foundations Fund Initiative to Improve Student Success in Community Colleges.”

Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Press Release 7/11/10.

 

Primary Subject: Education
Secondary Subject(s): Higher Education
Location(s): National

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