To
make the abstract idea of “college readiness” legible for public
purposes, readiness indicators have tended to treat students
identically: If a student meets a simple benchmark, he or she is ready
for any college. This shorthand ignores that indicators of readiness may
differ according to students’ backgrounds and where they choose to
enroll in college.
This study uses nationally representative data to show that readiness measures that are sensitive to students’ race/ethnicity and the selectivity and level of colleges in which they enroll reveal important nuance in readiness predictions. The authors find different readiness benchmarks indicate readiness for different groups of students when high school performance measures are used to predict different college outcomes, complicating the interpretation and use of conventional readiness measures.
This study uses nationally representative data to show that readiness measures that are sensitive to students’ race/ethnicity and the selectivity and level of colleges in which they enroll reveal important nuance in readiness predictions. The authors find different readiness benchmarks indicate readiness for different groups of students when high school performance measures are used to predict different college outcomes, complicating the interpretation and use of conventional readiness measures.
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