Many U.S. students arrive on college campus lacking the skills expected
for college-level work. As state leaders seek to increase postsecondary
enrollment and completion, public colleges have sought to lessen the
delays created by remedial course requirements. Tennessee has taken a
novel approach by allowing students to complete their remediation
requirements in high school.
This study evaluates the program’s impact on
college enrollment and credit accumulation, finding that the program
boosted enrollment in college-level math during the first year of
college and allowed students to earn a modest 4.5 additional college
credits by their second year. It also reports the first causal evidence
on remediation's impact on students' math skills, finding that the
program did not improve students’ math achievement, nor boost students’
chances of passing college math.
The findings cast doubt on the
effectiveness of the current model of remediation—whether in high school
or college—in improving students’ math skills. They also suggest that
the time cost of remediation—whether pre-requisite or co-requisite
remediation—is not the primary barrier causing low degree completion for
students with weak math preparation.
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