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remedial education
This Rutgers University-Newark class combines college-level math with some of the basics of high school algebra. Colleges around the country are quickly remaking remedial education, but researchers don’t know which models work. Credit: Meredith Kolodner

No question, remedial education needs an overhaul. Millions of young adults get trapped in rudimentary math and English classes that don’t earn them college credits but still cost the same tuition. More than two-thirds of all community college students and 40 percent of undergraduates in four-year colleges have to start with at least one developmental education class, in the euphemistic jargon of higher education. The majority of these students drop out without degrees.

Some college systems are trying to change those statistics. California State University is eliminating its remedial classes and putting all of its freshmen in college-level courses this fall. Remedial classes have been optional in Florida since 2014. Many other colleges are reducing the number of students who are sent to remedial coursework by changing the rules that funnel students into these prerequisite classes.

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This story also appeared in U.S. News & World Report

But many educators have doubts about whether skipping remedial classes altogether is a wise idea for students who failed to master subjects in high school. One idea gaining popularity is something called “corequisites.” The idea is that students take two classes at once, one remedial and one that earns college credit. But there’s very little research to show that this approach works. One of the few corequisite programs to be studied is an “Accelerated Learning Program” at the Community College of Baltimore County, where the same instructor taught both the remedial and college material to classes limited to 10 students.

Such small classes are not feasible for large institutions with many thousands of students. Texas, Tennessee and Virginia are quickly rolling out less expensive corequisite variations. Last week, researchers at the RAND Corporation published a report offering an early glimpse into the problems facing Texas community colleges, from faculty resistance to the lack of new corequisite textbooks or teaching materials.

The researchers are currently running an experiment in which they randomly assigned some Texas community colleges students to a corequisite model with an extra hour of remedial instruction added to a college-level English class. The full results won’t be known until 2021 after the researchers follow these students and see if their graduation rates improve. But even before the final report, a new Texas law is requiring that three quarters of all developmental ed students enroll in corequisites by 2020.

“We weren’t planning to issue a report, but states are scaling this up so quickly,” said RAND policy researcher Lindsay Daugherty, one of five authors on the report. “We’ve been collecting all this implementation data and we thought we’d publish it so that others can avoid the challenges that Texas colleges have run into.”

Daugherty’s first observation is that Texas community college administrators have quickly created more than 35 different flavors of corequisite programs. Some colleges are simply making students enroll in two separate classes, taught by two different instructors, without making any changes to the curriculum or the schedule. Another approach adds instructional time to the college-level course, increasing class time to four hours a week from three. Others are adding mandatory tutoring, instructor office hours or time in a computer lab using instructional software.

The term corequisite can sometimes mean any type of support that struggling students are given to get through a college-level class. By that definition, even Cal State’s plan to abolish remedial classes could be considered a corequisite model when it provides extra help to students.

Daugherty is seeing more promise in some models, less in others.

The easiest model for colleges to implement is requiring students to enroll in two English (or math) classes simultaneously instead of sequentially. Colleges don’t have to restructure anything and there’s no coordination between the two classes.

“Some colleges are taking what exists and try to make it work,” said Daugherty. “There are limited prospects for success. The colleges that start from scratch and really focus on what the student needs to succeed in the college level course are more promising.”

Daugherty argues that the remedial curriculum needs to be completely rewritten, targeted to what the student is learning each week in the college course. Instead of giving students disconnected grammar exercises and quizzes, Daugherty says, the grammar should be taught in the context of what the students are reading and writing in the college-level course.

Some of the stiffest resistance to corequisite models comes from developmental education instructors, Daugherty says. They’re not qualified to teach college-level courses and they feel under attack. The threat of job cuts looms. Daugherty says college administrators need to take more time before implementing a change to explain to developmental education instructors why students will benefit.

Daugherty is intrigued with models that eliminate the remedial classroom altogether. One college in El Paso requires students to go to office hours once a week. In Dallas, students must sign in at a writing center once a week and work with tutors. A problem for colleges is that they can’t charge students tuition for these services and they can charge tuition for a remedial class. Texas enacted changes to its funding formula so that community colleges could get paid for the extra office hours and tutoring but that might not be possible in other states.

The RAND researchers are starting to see early evidence that some of these corequisite models are working for students who arrived at college just below the academic threshold needed to enter college-level classes. Texas colleges are now expanding their co-requisite programs to students who are far less prepared. And it remains an open question whether these struggling students will be able to pass college classes with a little corequisite help.

Corequisites may sound like a great solution on paper, helping kids catch up while they are earning college credit. But instructors and students are still left with the hard work of teaching and learning. It’s going to take time to figure out how to do it right. Policymakers should not push colleges to put thousands of struggling students through a new ill-defined corequisite model before we know if it works and, if it does, for which students.

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  1. Thank you for beginning to look at this issue broadly and seriously. I do have a few things to add.

    It is not true that developmental education instructors “aren’t qualified to teach college.” Certainly in the community colleges where I’ve taught, we are highly qualified to teach college–in fact, 3 of our remedial teachers have doctorates in English. What developmental instructors know first-hand is the kind of chaos that is going to develop when a students who is literate at a second-grade level is put into a first-year composition class. That means a student who, for example, after 2 full semesters of small team-taught integrated classes (math vocabulary in reading class, for example), intensive tutoring, and rigid standards still doesn’t begin his sentences with capital letters. He’s going to fail freshman composition in his first 2 weeks–or those who are qualified to take the course will spend time waiting for the others to “catch up.” Ditto for a student who cannot add 2 and 5 without using her fingers–yes, I’ve tutored two of those.

    And thank you for your words of warning about going slowly and being sure what we are getting into. I’m pretty sure co-requisites work for “students who arrived at college just below the academic threshold needed to enter college-level classes,” and who want to learn (and have the time and energy too study, which is another issue). But what I’m seeing is a “this works for everyone!” race to shove in co-requisites as fast as possible and ignore the real problems.

    The real problem is that students are entering college not only poorly prepared but completely unprepared to do work even at a seventh-grade level. Many people have eloquently addressed all the reasons this happens, so I won’t go on here. But I do get tired of constantly hearing that it’s the terrible remedial classes that are causing these poor students to fail. I’m sure there are poor remedial teachers, but a lot of us work hard, try hard, try new things, tutor our students, advise them (because the advisors are interested only in pressuring them to take a full course load, even if they are working and caring for a family), buying them supplies, and walking them to the counselors’ office for help with medical, family, and emotional problems far beyond our capabilities to address.

  2. Institutions try for mass/class solutions while many of these students require individualized assessment and programming that is expensive. Some departments offer math labs for individual help provided by math and English majors for math courses and writing and reading improvement. Some students require an in-depth evaluation that was not provided in El/HI schools. Many students with learning disabilities diagnosed in HS do not want help in college due to imagined embarrassment. So long as EL/HI do not require basic mastery this river of need will continue to bring many unprepared students to confront probable failure. Being able to acknowledge a need for basics is a beginning. Prepared and skilled teachers with a variety of methods are necessary to serve the spectrum of needs (including removal of anxieties from a long history of emotional embarrassment).

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