The new U.S. national standards movement has pushed us at “warp speed” from Common Core curriculum standards to updated assessments for college readiness, but we have not fully examined what it means to be college ready. Why is it that roughly half of all high school students need remedial classes before being considered ready for college-level work? Current public policies aim to eliminate the need for remedial college classes by ratcheting up instruction and expectations at the K-12 level, but if we do not find out what these students are missing, how can we expect to be successful? For higher education scholars and practitioners and those generally interested in the future of college, this book helps tell a novel story about the transition to college, from the perspective of an experienced college professor. The first-year experience is conceptualized as a two-way relationship between students and colleges, involving introductions, resistance or acceptance, collaboration and exchange of ideas, and learning. There are both success stories and stories that end in a parting of ways. These stories show what college readiness really means and offer valuable insights about the academic, social, monetary and other forces that can overwhelm the typical college-bound student. Higher education scholars and professionals will benefit from these rich and detailed accounts as they help shape the landscape of 21st century college readiness.
Tabella dei contenuti
Acknowledgments; Introduction; Identities Welcome and Unwelcome In College; What Identities Does College Favor?; Prerequisites for College-Level Work; Prerequisites: “Ways of Being” and “Habits of Mind”; Prerequisites: Academic Knowledge, Skills, and Strategies; Conclusion; Talking a Good Game vs. Having a Real Plan; The Role of “Safehouses” in the College Experience; Doing College-Style Work on Hip Hop; Doing Hip Hop Style Work on College (and the World Outside College); Hip Hop Happenings; Making Connections: Intertextuality; Students Find Their People: Making a Place for Oneself through Clubs and Activities; Youth Movements, Black Lives Matter, and College Campuses; Black Lives Matter: Impact on Student Activists; Hope within Youth Activism; Conclusion; Preparing for Love: Implications for Conceptions of College Readiness; Epilogue.