Issue
25(2)
College-Level
Learning in High School: Purposes, Policies, and Practical Implications.
(2001). D. Bruce Johnstone and Beth Del Genio. Washington, DC:
Association of American Colleges and Universities, 70 pp., (paperback),
ISBN 0-911696-85-7.
Review
By: Vanetta
B. Bratcher
Assistant
Director of STEP, Center for Student Support Services
Indiana
Wesleyan
University,
Marion (IN)
What is at stake today when
high school students want to earn college credit through an Advanced
Placement (AP) Program or dual enrollment course? How do different
universities treat the credits for college-level learning
(CLLHS) earned by students still in high school? Who has
the right to determine what is most important when assessing these
issues? In this text, authors Johnstone and Del Genio present
the conclusions they drew from the results of a nation-wide survey
of the issues surrounding CLLHS.
The
authors identify three types of CLLHS programs, (a) examination-based
[AP Program], (b) school-based, and (c) college-based, as they
establish a comprehensive primer to the merits and criticisms
of each type. Educators seeking basics for measuring validity,
consistency, and value in CLL
HS will find useful the discussion
of policy and practice that impacts all CLLHS stakeholders: individual
students, their families, and institutions within secondary and
higher education (viii).
Chapter
V provides research analysis of data provided by academic affairs
personnel at 451 colleges and universities surveyed in 1998-99.
The authors further delineated results based on institutional
admissions selectivity and degree-granting characteristics. This
clearly illustrates the differences students find when attempting
to transfer CLL HS
credits to varied institutions.
Helpful to
both advisors and academic officers, is the clear (not to be confused
with simple) discussion regarding institutional philosophy, management
of student CLLHS credits, and the authors' rational criticism
of CLLHS programs. One such debate centered on whether college-based
courses taught to high school students on a college campus are
better than school-based college credit courses taught to high
school students by their high school teacher. The latter of which
is often favored by students and parents seeking help with the
inarguable increasing costs and competitive nature of college.
Drawing on over fifty years of educational
writing, the authors offer valuable perspective based upon the
insights they gained from five studies about CLLHS between 1998
and 2001. They use these insights to further discuss issues surrounding
curriculum and grading assessment, diversity of CLLHS institutional
policy and practice, and arguments for "college experience" beyond
content mastery. Finally, the authors provide an extensive bibliography
to assist those looking for further resources.
I
believe one of the best features of the text was its clear definition
of the CLLHS "stakeholders" and how their seemingly contradictory
positions simultaneously hold merit. Due to the thoroughness of
this text, I can better consider the issues surrounding CLL
HS and am prepared for campus
discussions with students and colleagues.