January 27, 2012
Shorter senior year? Grandparents, road safety
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After the holidays, I get in a clean and purge mood -- closets, pantry, desk, everything. So, here are a few items I found in the pile this week:

An increasing number of states are giving high school students an incentive to graduate early, Education Week reports. New scholarships for early graduates are starting in Idaho, Indiana, Minnesota and South Dakota.

Of course, knocking off a year or even a semester of high school isn't good for all students, or even most students. But think of the potential to short-circuit some of the tedium and senioritis that sets in, even among good, motivated students. Imagine students who had fulfilled all their graduation requirements and could demonstrate a constructive plan for that last semester. They could be enrolled in the next stage of their education or taking more rigorous classes at a nearby college, wherever they chose to go after traditional graduation.

Some school districts, where populations are shrinking, would be sorry to see students leave early because enrollment affects funding. Others, where they can't build classrooms fast enough, would probably welcome a few extra seats. But it shouldn't be a strictly mathematical equation. Schools could make a good case for a program that allows students to advance at their own pace but still requires the school to be in touch with students, advising and monitoring students' progress toward that next goal.

Letting the end point of high school actually depend on when certain academic requirement are met might also help high school diplomas be perceived less as a measure of time served and more as a measure of real knowledge and accomplishment.

***

During the last 10 years the number of children living with their grandparents has increased 50 percent, according to the Brookdale Grandparent Caregiver Information Project in California and reported in "Children's Voice," the magazine of the Child Welfare League of America.

That's 2.6 million grandparents rearing 6 million grandchildren. Another 1.5 million children are in the homes of other relatives. The reasons, not surprisingly, include substance abuse, illness, child abuse and neglect, incarceration, death and domestic violence.

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Shorter senior year? Grandparents, road safety

After the holidays, I get in a clean and purge mood -- closets, pantry, desk, everything. So, here are a few items I found in the pile this week:

An increasing number of states are giving high school students an incentive to graduate early, Education Week reports. New scholarships for early graduates are starting in Idaho, Indiana, Minnesota and South Dakota.

Of course, knocking off a year or even a semester of high school isn't good for all students, or even most students. But think of the potential to short-circuit some of the tedium and senioritis that sets in, even among good, motivated students. Imagine students who had fulfilled all their graduation requirements and could demonstrate a constructive plan for that last semester. They could be enrolled in the next stage of their education or taking more rigorous classes at a nearby college, wherever they chose to go after traditional graduation.

Some school districts, where populations are shrinking, would be sorry to see students leave early because enrollment affects funding. Others, where they can't build classrooms fast enough, would probably welcome a few extra seats. But it shouldn't be a strictly mathematical equation. Schools could make a good case for a program that allows students to advance at their own pace but still requires the school to be in touch with students, advising and monitoring students' progress toward that next goal.

Letting the end point of high school actually depend on when certain academic requirement are met might also help high school diplomas be perceived less as a measure of time served and more as a measure of real knowledge and accomplishment.

***

During the last 10 years the number of children living with their grandparents has increased 50 percent, according to the Brookdale Grandparent Caregiver Information Project in California and reported in "Children's Voice," the magazine of the Child Welfare League of America.

That's 2.6 million grandparents rearing 6 million grandchildren. Another 1.5 million children are in the homes of other relatives. The reasons, not surprisingly, include substance abuse, illness, child abuse and neglect, incarceration, death and domestic violence.

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