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Region 1 Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

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Region 1 Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013. Examine the Data for Education in Georgia. Academic Achievement Milestones. School Readiness. Literacy by 3 rd Grade. Numeracy by 8 th Grade. High School Graduation. Workforce and/or College Ready. School Readiness. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013
Page 2: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Region 1 Education and Workforce Development

Summit

November 14, 20131. Examine the Data for Education in Georgia

2. Economic Impact of Georgia Non-

Graduates

3. Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline

4. What Can We Do?

Page 3: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Examine the Data for Education in Georgia

Page 4: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Academic Achievement Milestones

School Readiness

Literacy by 3rd Grade

Numeracy by 8th Grade

High School Graduation

Workforce and/or College Ready

Page 5: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

School ReadinessPercent of Children with School Readiness Skills

Page 6: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

NAEP 4th Grade ReadingPercent At or Above Proficient

2005 2007 2009 2011 201325%

27%

29%

31%

33%

35%

37%

39%

33%

35% 35%

34%

37%

30%31%

32%32%

34%

26%

28% 28%

32%

34%

20th StateU.S.Georgia

Page 7: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

2005 2007 2009 2011 201320%

22%

24%

26%

28%

30%

32%

34%

36%

38%

40%

31%

35%36% 37% 37%

29%

31%

33%

34% 34%

23%

25%

27%

28%29%

20th StateU.S.Georgia

NAEP 8th Grade MathPercent At or Above Proficient

Page 8: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Georgia High School Graduation Rates

Source: The Governor’s Office of Student Achievement, State Report Cards.

Year Calhoun CityState

High School Graduation Rate

2009 N/A 58.6%*

2010 N/A 64.0%*

2011 85.3% 67.5%

2012 93.6% 69.7%

Total

* Approximations from Georgia Department of Education

StatewideNumber of High

School Non-Grads

62,172

51,503

44,661

37,839

196,176

Page 9: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Economic Impact of Georgia Non-Graduates

Page 10: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Education Pays

Source: *U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Table A-4. Employment status of the civilian population 25 years and over by educational attainment.

**U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Table 5. Quartiles of usual weekly earnings of full-time wage and salary workers.

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT & EMPLOYMENTUnemployment

Rate* August 2013Median Wkly

Earnings** (& approx. annual)

15% 10% 5% 0% 0 200 600 1000

3.5 Bachelor’s Degree & Higher $1,189 ($61,828)

6.1 Some college/ Associate Degree $741 ($38,523)

7.6 HS Graduates, No College

$651 ($33,852)

11.3 Less than a High School Diploma

$457 ($23,764)

Page 11: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

High School Graduation Rates by County, 2012

Page 12: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Unemployment Rate by County, May 2013

Page 13: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Compounded Impacts of High School Non-Completion

Source: Levin, H., et al., (2007). The Costs and Benefits of an Excellent Education for All of America’s Children.

INDIVIDUALS THE COMMUNITY

Lower Lifetime Earnings Reduced buying power & tax revenues; less economic growth

Decreased health status; Higher mortality rates; More criminal activity

Higher health care & criminal justice costs

Higher teen pregnancy rates; Single motherhood Higher public services costs

Less voting; Less volunteering Low rate of community involvement

Page 14: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline

Page 15: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Strengthening the Birth to Work Pipeline

KEY ISSUE

#1Early Life Experiences

KEY ISSUE

#2Academic Achievement K-12

KEY ISSUE

#3Transitions to Work or College

Page 16: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36

Age of child in months

Voc

abul

ary

Size

Disparities in Early Vocabulary Growth

Source: Hart, B. and Risley, T. R. (2003). “The Early Catastrophe: The 30 Million Word Gap by Age 3.”

Professional Families 1,116 words

Working Class Families 749 words

Welfare Families 525 words

Page 17: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Economic Benefits of Early Education:Perry Preschool Study

Source: Schweinhart, L.J., et al. (2005). Lifetime effects: The High/Scope Perry Preschool study through age 40.

Page 18: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Achievement Gap as Children Enter Kindergarten

Page 19: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Essential Building Blocks of High Performing States

Higher Standards

Rigorous Curriculum

Clear Accountability System

Statewide Student Information System

Leadership Training

Page 20: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

The Changing Face of Georgia

Series1

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%

White 8%

All 16%

African-American 20%

Living in poverty 38%

Asian 45%

Hispanic 49%

2001-2010: Percent Population Increase

Page 21: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

4-Year Graduation Rate, 2011

Georgia Gordon County

All 68% 82%

Asian 79% N/A

White 76% 83%

African-American 60% 64%

Hispanic 58% 89%

Low-Income 59% 84%

English Language Learners

32% N/A

Page 22: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

100 Georgia Ninth Graders

* Data provided by the Technical College System of Georgia . Based on 2008 graduation data

Page 23: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Georgia Needs:The Economic Development Pipeline

250,000 new post-secondary graduates by 2020

60% of jobs in 2020 will require some higher education

42% of Georgian’s currently have a post-secondary degree

Page 24: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

HS Graduates and Economic Development

• With an additional 30,000 HS graduates:– $242 million increased earnings– $191 million increased spending

• This additional spending would support:– $350 million increase in state gross product– $18 million increase in state tax revenue

Source: Alliance for Excellent Education. “The Economic Benefits of Helping High School Dropouts.” December 2012.

Page 25: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Predicted Workforce Gap

Source: Complete College Georgia,: Georgia’s Higher Education Completion Plan 2012

42%

2012 2020

43% Current Path

60% Complete College Georgia

250,000 additional graduates

Georgia’s Young Workforce with a Certificate or College Degree

Page 26: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

3. Increasing academic rigor and expectations

Georgia’s Future Workforce

1. Increasing demand for highly skilled labor force

2. Changing demographics+

+

=

Perfect Storm? Trifecta of Opportunity?

Page 27: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

What can we do?

Page 28: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Profile of Child Wellbeing and Academic Achievement, Region 1

2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

Bartow

Floyd

Gordon

Murray

Paulding

Whitfield

Page 29: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Teen Birth Rates per 1,000, Region 1

* Data provided by Georgia Kids Count, Georgia Family Connection Partnership, http://www.gafcp.org

2007 2008 2009 2010 201120

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

BartowFloydGordonMurrayPauldingWhitfield

Page 30: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Percent Teens Not Working or in School, Region 1

* Data provided by Georgia Kids Count, Georgia Family Connection Partnership, http://www.gafcp.org

2005 - 2009 2006 - 2010 2007 - 20117%

9%

11%

13%

15%

17%

BartowFloydGordonMurrayPauldingWhitfield

Page 31: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Percent 3rd Grade Reading, Meets/ Exceeds, Region 1

* Georgia Department of Education

2009 2010 2011 2012 201385%

87%

89%

91%

93%

95%

97%

99%

BartowFloydGordonMurrayPauldingWhitfield

Page 32: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Percent 8th Grade Math, Meets/ Exceeds, Region 1

* Data provided by the Georgia Department of Education

2009 2010 2011 2012 201358%

63%

68%

73%

78%

83%

88%

93%

BartowFloydGordonMurrayPauldingWhitfield

Page 33: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

High School Graduation, Region 1

* Data provided by the Georgia Department of Education

Bartow Floyd Gordon Murray Paulding Whitfield

66%72%

83%

66%

76%

63%67%

76%82% 79%

76%

64%

2011 2012

Page 34: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

How Will You Insulate the Birth to Work Pipeline?

LEARNING & SOCIAL SUPPORTS

Childcare Providers

Afterschool Programs

Academic Supports

Job Training

Civic Opportunities

Early Childhood

K – 12 SystemPost Secondary

Work & Career

ESSENTIAL COMMUNITY SERVICES

Transportation Health Housing Financial

Source: The Forum for Youth Investment

Page 35: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Help Insulate the PipelinePost Secondary

Read to children every day

Quality Rated: Encourage participation of your early learning centers

Read and mentor students

Leverage partnerships with business and post-secondary

Build a cadre of effective teachers and leaders

Provide internships/ apprenticeships

Be involved as a community volunteer in Georgia Apply to College

Increase the number of post-secondary graduates

Early Childhood

K – 12 System

Page 36: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Small Group Discussion

Question #1

What are the strengths in your community?

Question#2 What is a concern?

Question #3 What can you do?

Page 37: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Aligning Educational Strategies

Aligned Acts of Improvement

Random Acts of Improvement

GOALS

GOALS

Page 38: Region 1  Education and Workforce Development Summit November 14, 2013

Connect with us

Twitter: @GAPartnership Facebook: Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education Instagram: @GAPARTNERSHIP

LinkedIn: Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education

Website: www.gpee.org