The Condition of College & Career Readiness 2016

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The Condition of College and Career Readiness This report looks at the progress of the 16 ACT -tested graduating class relative to college and career readiness. This year s report shows that 64% of students in the 16 US graduating class took the ACT test, up from 59% in 15 and 49% in 11. The increased number of test takers over the past several years enhances the breadth and depth of the data pool, providing a comprehensive picture of the current graduating class in the context of college readiness, as well as offering a glimpse at the emerging educational pipeline. As a research-based nonprofit organization, ACT is committed to providing information and solutions to support the following: Holistic view of readiness. The 14 ACT report, Broadening the Definition of College and Career Readiness: A Holistic Approach, shows academic readiness is only one of four critical domains in determining an individual s readiness for success in college and career. Cross-cutting capabilities, behavioral skills, and the ability to navigate future pathways are also important factors to measure and address. Together, these elements define a clear picture of student readiness for postsecondary education. Providing meaningful data for better decisions. ACT is focused on providing better data to students, parents, schools, districts, and states so that all can make more informed decisions to improve outcomes. We accomplish this goal by taking a holistic view and using consistent and reliable historical information so that individuals and institutions have a better context to make critical decisions about the journey they have undertaken. The Condition of College & Career Readiness 16 Maine Key Findings Performance The total number of 16 Maine graduates who took the ACT declined slightly to 1,397, compared to 1,434 students in the 15 graduating class. In Maine, the percent of students meeting the ACT College Readiness Benchmarks decreased in three subject areas, the largest of which was in science and reading: ~ ~ A 5% decrease in science, from 59% to 54% (average score decreased by.5 point) ~ ~ A 5% decrease in reading, from 68% to 63% (average score decreased by.7 point) ~ ~ The percent of students meeting all four ACT College Readiness Benchmarks also decreased by 4%. The average ACT Composite score dropped by.6 point. Relative to ACT Composite score and subject level scores, Maine saw the following: ~ ~ Even as the size of the state s graduating class taking the ACT has decreased, the number of Asian students has grown from 4% in 12 to 8% in 16. ~ ~ The average state Composite score, 23.6, currently exceeds the national average of.8. STEM 78% of Maine test takers are taking a physics course sequence, which exceeds the national average of 51%. 87% of Maine test takers are taking more than three years of math, compared to 71% nationally. Over the last five years, Maine has shown an increase in mathematics scores for students meeting the STEM Benchmark, even as the nation has remained flat. STEM Benchmark Achievement ~ ~ 37% of the 16 Maine graduating class met the ACT STEM Benchmark, which is 17% higher than the national average. The average score was 2.8 points above the national average. This is great news for a state with so many STEM initiatives. Career Readiness This year, for the first time, ACT has provided an indicator of career readiness based on ACT composite scores. Table 3.4 in the state ACT Profile Report details how ACT-tested Maine graduates are progressing toward the ACT National Career Readiness Certificate (ACT NCRC ). Progress toward career readiness is based on research linking ACT Composite scores to ACT NCRC levels. The ACT Composite cut score for each ACT NCRC level corresponds to a 5% chance of obtaining that level. If a student s ACT Composite score surpassed the cut score for an ACT NCRC level, they are categorized as making progress towards the next higher ACT NCRC level. Attainment of ACT NCRC levels indicates workplace employability skills that are critical to job success. In Maine, 89% of ACT tested graduates are considered making progress towards at least a gold ACT NCRC level. This compares to 68% nationally. www.act.org/research 16 by ACT, Inc. All rights reserved. 6289

Maine The Condition of College & Career Readiness Behaviors that Impact Access and Opportunity Testing patterns ~ ~ Of the ACT-tested 16 graduates testing during their 1th-, 11th-, or 12th-grade years, students taking the ACT more than once averaged an increase in Composite score. Below are the top five colleges and universities to which Maine graduates sent their ACT scores: 1. University of Maine 2. University of New Hampshire 3. Husson University 4. University of Southern Maine 5. Northeastern University ACT Educational Opportunity Service (EOS) opt-in rates ~ ~ EOS is a free service that allows students to learn about educational, scholarship, career, and financial aid opportunities from colleges, universities, financial aid and scholarship agencies, and other organizations that offer educational programs. In the 16 Maine graduating class, 54.9% of students opted into EOS. This is well below the national average of 73.1%. Get Your Name in the Game information ~ ~ The Get Your Name is the Game campaign gives students an opportunity to find colleges that would be a good fit and helps students who were not thinking about postsecondary education to realize that college is a possibility. ~ ~ Colby College and University of Maine at Presque Island accessed 68,838 student names using this initiative. Fee Waiver Usage ~ ~ In Maine, there were 126 fee waivers issued and 86 of those were used. This equates to a 68.3% usage rate. The national rate was 74.5%. ~ ~ ACT provides students fee waivers to provide more access and opportunity for students. Pipeline Only 2% of ACT-tested Maine 16 graduates expressed an interest in pursuing education as a major or career. Those students earned an average ACT Composite score of 21.2, lower than the state average of 23.6. In comparison, 3% expressed an interest in pursuing visual and performing arts. Aspirations matter. Students in Maine who aspire to a higher level of postsecondary education achieve higher ACT Composite scores: ~ ~ 24% of graduates aspiring to a professional degree earn an average Composite score of 25.6. ~ ~ 23% of graduates aspiring to a graduate degree earn an average Composite score of 24.6. ~ ~ 34% of graduates aspiring to a bachelor s degree earn an average Composite score of 21.8. ~ ~ 1% of graduates aspiring to an associate s degree earn an average Composite score of 21.6. 22% of students who took the ACT in Maine listed Undecided as their planned educational major higher than the national average of 13%. This is a great opportunity to expose students to the ACT Interest Inventory at an earlier age with ACT Profile and PreACTTM, allowing students starting at age 13 to see the connection between their personal characteristics and potential majors/careers. 15% of students listed Health Science and Technology as an intended major or career. The average score for these students is 22.5, which is below the state average of 23.6. With the largest-growing jobs in the state being personal care aides and registered nurses, these students will have many opportunities. ACT Footprint ACT Aspire Summative ACT Aspire Periodic ACT Engage ACT QualityCore PreACT ACT WorkKeys 186 25 133* 75 * PreACT refers to preorders for FY17. These are the number of each of these assessments delivered in the state and not reflective of the 16 ACT-tested graduating class.

Your State College and Career Readiness Attainment, Participation, and Opportunity Maine of 16 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting ACT College Readiness Benchmarks by Subject of 12 16 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting ACT College Readiness Benchmarks* 81 61 63 44 41 54 36 43 26 84 83 84 85 7 64 65 68 65 62 61 59 43 53 53 47 39 41 81 63 54 43 English Reading Mathematics Science All Four Subjects 12 13 14 15 16 Maine Nation English Reading Mathematics Science All Four Subjects Note: s in this report may not sum to % due to rounding. * ACT College Readiness Benchmarks in reading and science were revised in 13. Student Data Trends Between 12 and 16, the number of students taking the ACT in Maine decreased by 5%. Student Condition Data Interest Trends: 12 16, State vs. Nation Outcome Cohort 12 13 14 15 16 Tested N Tested Average English Average Reading Average Mathematics Average Science Average Composite Maine 9% 8% 9% 1% 1% Nation 52% 54% 57% 59% 64% Maine 1,47 1,283 1,276 1,434 1,397 Nation 1,6,17 1,799,243 1,845,787 1,924,436 2,9,342 Maine 23.5 23.4 23.3 24.2 23.3 Nation.5.2.3.4.1 Maine 23.7 23.8 24.1 24.6 23.9 Nation 21.3 21.1 21.3 21.4 21.3 Maine 23.3 23.3 23.6 23.9 23.8 Nation 21.1.9.9.8.6 Maine 22.7 22.9 22.8 23.6 23.1 Nation.9.7.8.9.8 Maine 23.4 23.5 23.6 24.2 23.6 Nation 21.1.9 21 21.8 www.act.org/research 16 by ACT, Inc. All rights reserved. 6289

Maine Your State College and Career Readiness Attainment, Participation, and Opportunity of 16 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by ACT College Readiness Benchmark Attainment and Subject Trends in of ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Number of ACT College Readiness Benchmarks (CRBs) Attained 1 9 25 26 3 13 8 15 81 63 54 English Reading Mathematics Science Below Benchmark by 3+ Points Within 2 Points of Benchmark Met Benchmark 12 13 14 15 16 Graduation Year Maine Students Attaining CRBs Maine Students Attaining 3 or 4 CRBs National Students Attaining CRBs National Students Attaining 3 or 4 CRBs of 12 16 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Race/Ethnicity of 12 16 ACT-Tested High School Graduates Meeting Three or More Benchmarks by Race/Ethnicity 1 4 2 5 2 2 2 2 6 6 8 2 3 2 2 83 82 79 81 78 2 2 2 3 2 7 7 7 6 9 12 13 14 15 16 African American American Indian Asian American Hispanic Pacific Islander White Two or More Races No Response 61 65 57 54 56 45 9 33 21 65 65 12 13 14 15 16 African American American Indian Asian American Hispanic 39 38 Pacific Islander 61 52 18 56 White Note: Values less than.5% will not appear. Note: Groups having fewer than 1 students in a year are not represented. of 16 ACT-Tested High School Graduates by Educational Aspirations 47 34 18 There is good news in that 82% of Maine s 16 ACTtested graduates aspired to postsecondary education. Interestingly enough, 86% of Maine s 15 ACT-tested graduating class aspired to enroll in postsecondary education, compared to % who actually did enroll. If we fully closed the aspirational gap, an additional 81 of the 15 ACT-tested graduates from Maine would have enrolled in postsecondary education. Graduate/ Professional Degree Bachelor s Degree 1 Associate s/ Voc-tech Degree Other/No Response

What You Need to Know At ACT, we are inspired every day to make a positive difference. Here are a few ways we are making an impact each day in the lives of students, teachers, education, policy makers, and workforce leaders. Enhancements to ACT Reports starting in September 16 Introduction of ACT Kaplan Online Prep Live in September 16 New Reports New Performance Level Descriptors coming in August 16 More than 5 million ACT Aspire online assessments administered to US students since January 16, a major milestone for the program and up by more than 13% compared to the previous year New Reports Affordable cost $12 per student tested for schools, districts, and states Flexible administration Schools, districts, and/or states may administer on any date between September 1, 16 and June 1, 17 Structured test environment Similar to what the student will experience when taking the ACT test Helps schools face the challenge of preparing students for success after high school. Read the latest white paper, Identifying Skills to Succeed in School, at Work, and in the Real World. New Reports A virtual classroom experience that delivers all the benefits of ACT Online Prep, plus an interactive teaching experience Live learning experiences available at no cost to students who register for the ACT using a fee waiver Recorded sessions available on demand to provide maximum flexibility to students Updated versions of the ACT National Career Readiness Certificate (ACT NCRC) assessments and credential coming in summer 17 Fully updated ACT WorkKeys curriculum and test prep available in summer 17 to support the updated ACT NCRC assessments Will include a new test delivery platform that will introduce features and functionality important to ACT WorkKeys customers www.act.org/condition16

Maine The Condition of College & Career Readiness Key ACT Research The Condition of STEM 16 National The Condition of STEM 16 Releasing November 16 This report provides national and state data about the 16 graduating class in the context of STEM-related fields (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) to determine student interest levels in specific STEM fields and, more importantly, readiness in math and science of those interested in STEM careers. College Choice Report 15 National College Choice Report 15 This report follows the ACT-tested high school graduating class of 15, focusing on specific testing behaviors that may expand college opportunities available to students. This is an important topic for enrollment managers and admissions officers to consider, as students participation in these testing behaviors have implications for colleges chances to recruit, advise, and place these prospective students. Recommendations 1. Create an assessment model that measures a variety of skill domains and competencies required for college and career success. Historically, college and career readiness assessments have focused only on academic skills. ACT research has clearly established areas of competency important for college and career readiness success. While our research shows that ACT solutions independently measure key components of college AND career readiness, we and others have begun to realize that no single solution can measure the full breadth of this readiness, nor should it. Simply put, the ACT alone is not enough to measure the full breadth of career readiness. A more holistic assessment model, incorporating multiple domains and specific skills associated with career clusters or occupations, will typically be most appropriate for describing and evaluating student readiness for college and career. 2. Optimize opportunities to influence awareness and engagement of underserved learners. Initiatives designed to aid underserved learners are only as effective as they are visible. We must inform advocates and ALL underserved learners about the available and effective programs designed for this purpose. For example, in the 15 16 academic year, approximately 73, students registered to take the ACT using fee waivers valued at more than $36 million. Yet, not all eligible students took advantage of this offer. Similarly, institutions must use data to inform intervention strategies if they are going to help underserved students be prepared for postsecondary success. 3. Take the guesswork out of STEM. It is critically important to align STEM initiatives to capitalize on performance, measured interest, and expressed interest. Essential to this effort is expanding and nurturing interest in STEM, which will impact the emerging pipeline of STEM majors, teachers, and workers. This requires capturing a wider range of students and employing concrete measures to inform intervention and programming. To do so, states and districts must look for partnering opportunities from K 12 to postsecondary education to the workplace. 4. Focus on the implementation of fewer, higher, clearer, standards in K 12 classrooms to raise the bar for all students. No matter the adopted standards, proper implementation must focus on the most critical component for increasing readiness effective, high-quality teaching. This requires investment in postsecondary teaching programs, professional development, and state-level collaboration among K 12 and higher education. 5. Don t over test students. When states, schools, and districts build an assessment strategy that recognizes the limits and promise of test scores, they will reduce the likelihood of over testing. Used ethically and appropriately, assessments can inform decisions at individual and institutional levels. Misunderstood, misused, or abused, assessments cause confusion, can be perceived as punitive, or result in illconceived strategies. To quote ACT founder E.F. Lindquist, Assessment is valuable to the extent it bridges teaching and learning. *1172117* Rev 1