What the Public Is Saying About College and Career Readiness Among Americans, there is near universal agreement across partisan, ethnic/racial and geographic lines that some education and training beyond high school is necessary – and that stronger expectations in high school will go a long way towards preparing students for their next steps. There is strong agreement that education or training beyond high school is necessary for future success: 89% of voters agree that “to really get ahead in life a person needs at least some education beyond high school, whether that means university, community college, technical or vocational school.”
89% of Republicans, 90% of Democrats and 87% of Independents agree with this statement. 1
95% of Americans say a postsecondary degree or certificate is very or somewhat important for financial security.2
The public see the connection between education and economic competitiveness. Two-thirds believe that a high dropout rate has a lot of impact on the nation’s economy (69%), and similarly on America’s ability to compete in the global economy (65%).3
About 68% of voters believe public schools should be teaching more math and science; over 80% of voters strongly (54%) or somewhat (30%) agree there will be “a lot more jobs” in the future in that require advanced math and science skills.4
Most people see the need for major reform of our public schools: Nearly three-quarters of voters believe that improving public high schools is extremely or very urgent.
Voters place more urgency on improving high schools than they do on improving middle schools (67% urgent; 33% extremely urgent) or elementary schools (63% urgent; 32% extremely urgent).5
It is better for all states to have the SAME STANDARDS at each grade level in math and English so students across the country have to meet the same expectations.
62%
It is better for all states to have their OWN STANDARDS at each grade level in math and English so each state can be sure that the standards reflect their own priorities.
35%
It is better for all states to have the SAME TESTS at each grade level in math and English so test scores can be compared across states.
64%
It is better for all states to have their OWN TESTS at each grade level in math and English that reflect their own priorities.
34%
0%
20%
40%
60%
Support for common standards, assessments and graduation requirements is robust: 6 63% of voters believe it is “better to implement the same rigorous graduation requirements for everyone so all students are being pushed to succeed and achieve their potential,” while just 32%
1
Achieve (2010). Achieving the Possible: What American Voters Think about the College- and Career-Ready Agenda. http://www.achieve.org/AchievingthePossible 2 Lumina Foundation/Gallup (2011). Most Americans See College as Essential to Getting a Good Job. http://www.luminafoundation.org/newsroom/news_releases/2011-08-18.html 3 Alliance for Excellent Education (2010). National Voter Survey on Public High Schools and ESEA Reauthorization. http://www.all4ed.org/publication_material/July2010Poll 4 Public Agenda (2010). Are We Beginning to See the Light? http://www.publicagenda.org/pages/math-and-science-ed-2010 5 Alliance (2010) 6 Achieve (2010)
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