Raising the Educational Achievement of Secondary School Students - Volume 2 Profiles of Promising Practices - 1995

A r c h i v e d  I n f o r m a t i o n

Dropout Prevention In The Middle Grades Helping At-Risk Students Make Up Lost Time

The Urban Collaborative Accelerated Program (UCAP)
Providence, Rhode Island

Key Characteristics

  • Accelerated program allows retained students to catch up with their peers

  • Personalized learning environment engages tudents and develops responsibility

  • Experimental learning opportunities foster learning in the community
Number of Students:105

Grades Served: 7-9

Racial/Ethnic Breakdown:
36% African American
31% White
5% Hispanic
5% Asian

Eligible for Free/Reduced-Price Lunch: 81%

Chapter 1 Program: No

Major Sources of Outside Funding: Tuition from participating school districts, Rhode Island legislative grant, Rhode Island Department of Education dropout prevention grant, private industry, foundations

Overview

Jolene was fed up with school and frustrated that, once again, she would have to repeat the seventh grade. Two years after entering the Urban Collaborative Accelerated Program (UCAP), Jolene has renewed vigor and is ready to enter the tenth grade with her peers; she even hopes to attend college. Jolene caught up through an accelerated program that helps middle-school students complete three years of school in two, matriculate into a regular high school, and graduate with their peers.

Founded by Rhode Island in collaboration with three urban school districts to address soaring dropout rates in those cities, UCAP provides accelerated classes and individualized services to middle-school students at high risk of dropping out.

School Context

The Urban Collaborative Accelerated Program began in the fall of 1989 as a middle school serving selected at-risk students from three neighboring cities in Rhode Island--Providence, East Providence, and Pawtucket--where dropout rates ranged from 25 percent to 44 percent. All students in UCAP have repeated at least one year of school and have other behaviors--chronic absenteeism, low grades, or a history of suspensions--that identify them as at risk of dropping out of school. Many of these students come from the state's poorest and most violent neighborhoods and have chaotic family histories.

UCAP attracts more than twice as many students as it can serve. Teachers--who recruit and admit students--target those who most need UCAP's offerings and have a realistic chance of succeeding. Students may stay at UCAP for a maximum of two years, during which the school challenges them to master the equivalent of three grade levels.

Major Program Features

UCAP helps students develop the academic and social skills needed to successfully complete high school. UCAP's director modeled the program after a smaller-scale summer program he had managed in Providence. With support from superintendents of the three neighboring cities, the director gained an endorsement from the state legislature for a larger initiative to address rising dropout rates in the area.

Individualized Instruction and Accelerated Promotion

Student-Created Discipline Policy

UCAP uses a student-managed disciplinary process to help students take control of their lives and develop individual and community responsibility, despite the high number of UCAP students with histories of discipline problems. Students develop school rules and monitor their implementation and enforcement through a student discipline committee. All students take rotating turns on the committee to hear and rule on cases presented by teachers and other students. Often, the rules developed by students are stricter than those devised by staff. For example, students might change a "no swearing" policy to "no swearing in any language." Teachers say the student involvement improves students' attitudes toward school and results in accelerated learning. Although UCAP expels about 10 percent of its students every year, the rate of disciplinary infractions is lower than in other schools.

Experiential Learning Options

With private funding, UCAP sponsors several programs that allow students to engage in learning outside the classroom, apart from the regular demands of the academic schedule.

Supportive Counselors

The school has a full-time counselor with a background in social work, who makes home visits to incoming students and their families; information from these visits is available to other teachers. The counselor meets regularly with two part-time counselors who monitor UCAP alumni who have entered more traditional high schools, and may also make home visits. Counselors serve as problem solvers and liaisons between UCAP, the high schools, and alumni to ensure the proper flow of information and support. UCAP counselors sponsor alumni gatherings, such as field trips and pizza parties, "just so they know we're still here and that our doors are always open." These events give UCAP graduates time to socialize with their peers--a rare opportunity because the school draws students from three school districts.

Support for Implementation

Legislative Charter

UCAP's charter gives it autonomy to initiate many of its unique programs and approaches to education. The school is an independent public entity, with total control over all aspects of its operation, including such key factors as budget, curriculum, and personnel. It is run by a board of superintendents of the participating school districts, with day-to-day oversight by a director who reports to the board on a monthly or bimonthly basis.

Teacher Empowerment

UCAP has four full-time and four part-time teachers in addition to a project director, secretary, teacher's aide, social worker, and part-time librarian. Teachers at UCAP are closely involved in all decision making affecting the operation of the school. Together, teachers decide which applicants will be admitted to the school and whether a student is to be expelled. Teachers also have significant input into hiring other teachers and staff; they are responsible for scheduling the academic week, defining the curriculum, and scheduling the yearly school calendar. The project director attributes this autonomy to the simplicity of the school's administrative structure.

Funding

UCAP's operating budget was about $6,850 per student in FY 95, a figure comparable with the average per-pupil expenditure in Rhode Island in 1991-92 ($6,830). Not included in UCAP's operating budget are special programs and services discussed above, which are funded through private sources. In each of the school's first five years, UCAP raised about $75,000 to support special programs. Some of these private funding sources include Patriot Metals in Providence, Pawtucket's Memorial Hospital, small charitable and community foundations, the New York Community Trust, electric and telephone companies, and two family trusts.

Evidence of Success

More than 80 percent of UCAP graduates remain in school after entering traditional high schools, and student grades, attendance, and attitudes have improved. Although graduates' academic performance is slightly below average, their average post-UCAP grade point average of 2.4 on a 4.0 scale is a significant improvement when compared with their average pre-UCAP grades of 1.6. On standardized tests, pre-UCAP scores on the MAT were in the 24th percentile; post-UCAP scores have reached the 43rd percentile.

According to a 1992 evaluation, students were absent an average of 42 days each school year before they came to UCAP; after they left UCAP, their absences fell to an average 18 days a year. Behavioral problems have declined--according to parents and mainstream school teachers, UCAP graduates get into few fights, seem happy, and have a good sense of self-esteem. Students report having less anger in their relations with peers and teachers and consistently cite the "family atmosphere" at UCAP that has helped them succeed. UCAP graduates also report a reduction in drug use and a general trend toward self-discipline. Said one, "If I hadn't come to UCAP, I'd just be a bum in my house."

In fall 1993, the Carnegie Foundation recognized UCAP as one of four Lead Schools in Rhode Island--schools that are considered exemplars of middle school teaching philosophies.
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