Obama Announces “ConnectED” Plan to Provide Schools with High-Speed Internet Access

On June 6, President Obama announced “ConnectED,” a plan to provide 99 percent of the nation’s students with next-generation broadband and high-speed wireless in schools and libraries within five years. The plan would also ensure that every educator in America receives support and training to use technology to help improve student outcomes.

"In a country where we expect free wi-fi with our coffee, why shouldn't we expect it for our schools?" Obama said at Mooresville Middle School (NC). “We are living in a digital age, and to help our students get ahead, we must make sure they have access to cutting-edge technology."

In a statement, Alliance President Bob Wise said the effective use of technology is "the only way to put every student in the fast lane to college and career readiness." Noting that Mooresville is only 30 minutes north of the NASCAR Hall of Fame, Wise said Obama's plan makes it possible for every school to build on the ‘Mooresville momentum’ and ensures that all students are on the same track, moving at the fastest possible speed, and heading toward higher standards and better learning outcomes.”

Wise also noted that the Alliance featured Mooresville in the first-ever Digital Learning Day and included Scott Smith, Mooresville’s chief technology officer on the Alliance’s Project 24 Team of Experts. (Learn more about Mooresville by clicking on the video above).

More details on President Obama’s ConnectED initiative is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/connected_fact_sheet.pdf.

Find the Lowest-Performing High Schools in Your State

Click on Image for Larger VersionOne in four high school students do not graduate and just 12 percent of the nation‘s high schools produce nearly half of the nation‘s dropouts. Within these lowest-performing high schools (sometimes known as "dropout factories"), just 60 percent or fewer of entering freshmen progress to their senior year three years later.

Prioritizing the Nation's Lowest-Performing High Schools, an issue brief from the Alliance, notes that the lowest-performing high schools are located in every state; in urban, suburban, rural, and small-town America; in large high schools and small. Their one unifying characteristic is that they disproportionately serve our nation‘s poor and minority students.

In an era of diminishing financial resources, it makes good economic sense to target the nation's lowest-performing high schools and focus attention, commitment, and resources on improving them, the brief argues. Directing strategic efforts to turn around these schools could significantly reduce the nation's dropout rate.

"When emergency medical personnel arrive at an accident scene, they immediately deliver treatment to the most severely injured, said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education and former governor of West Virginia. "Similarly, the nation must focus its attention on the lowest-performing schools with the largest number of ‘victims' in the national dropout crisis. The fact that these schools are so widespread and contribute so greatly to the national dropout crisis dictates making them an essential focus of any federal effort to improve the graduation rate."

While not a graduation rate, a school’s “promoting power” is a good indicator of how well schools are educating their students. See how high schools across the country perform by going to the Promoting Power database. High schools with promoting power less than 60 percent make up the nation's lowest-performing high schools.

Recent Posts from the Alliance's High School Soup Blog

Read more at the High School Soup Blog.

Cajon Valley Union School District Fosters Academic Growth, Student Leadership, Through Digital Learning

A new interactive video profile from the Alliance for Excellent Education shows how Cajon Valley Union School District (Cajon Valley USD) in California has paired digital learning with increased support for teachers and students to improve student outcomes, including tremendous improvement in student achievement, behavior, and engagement.

The profile, Cajon Valley Union School District: Changing the Culture of Learning to Empower Students, is the second in a series of interactive video profiles demonstrating how leading school districts use digital learning to improve teaching and learning.

“Cajon Valley USD demonstrates to thousands of school district leaders a successful model in strategic planning and digital learning implementation. This groundbreaking interactive profile is an asset to the Alliance’s Project 24, an initiative that helps school districts plan for twenty-first-century learning and teaching,” said Bob Wise, president of the Alliance for Excellent Education.

Read the press release or download the interactive profile.

  • Federal Bill Targets High Schools
    News-Leader.com
    June 12, 2013

    Iowa Sen. Tom Hankin, who serves as the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee chairman, has introduced a bill to reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act as a replacement to No Child Left Behind ... Consider what my good friend former West Virginia Governor Bob Wise says:“SASA would help ensure that today’s students can compete for tomorrow’s jobs by ensuring that students graduate from high school with the ‘deeper learning’ skills sought by employers, including deep content knowledge and the ability to use knowledge to think critically, solve problems, communicate effectively, and collaborate with others.

  • Dropout Recovery: Further Research and Resources for Diplomas Count 2013
    Education Week
    June 6, 2013

    Whether you call them opportunity youth, disconnected students, or just plain dropouts, there's limited but growing research on what it takes to bring back students who have left high school without graduating and help them succeed academically ... It is a collaboration by the Alliance for Excellent Education, America's Promise Alliance, Civic Enterprises, and the Everyone Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins University.

  • New Star Rating System Rises Over Nevada's Struggling Schools
    Las Vegas Review-Journal
    June 5, 2013

    Less than 19 percent of Clark County high school students passed the Algebra I spring semester exam in 2012 ... “Do the math, and it doesn’t add up,” said Phillip Lovell, a vice president at the Washington, D.C.-based Alliance for Excellent Education.

FOLLOW THE ALLIANCE

View the Alliance for Excellent Education Blog

High Schools in
Your State

Choose a state and find out more about education statistics in your area.

Elements of a Successful High School

Students

Learn about the ten elements that every high school should have in place to ensure that all of its students are successful.

 

Alliance for Excellent Education
1201 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 901 | Washington, DC 20036 | Phone: 202 828 0828 | Fax: 202 828 0821
© Alliance for Excellent Education