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Can middle schoolers handle college? This California school is finding out

Can middle schoolers handle college? This California school is finding out

By 2:45 p.m. the regular school day at August Boeger Middle School had already ended, but one class is about to start. More than 20 eighth graders drop their backpacks and settle into desks — not for extra credit but for college credit.
These 13- and 14-year-old students in East San Jose are taking their first college course, an entry-level class on career planning. This middle school is one of the first in California to offer a college-level course. In the coming years, the San Jose Evergreen Community College District wants all middle school students in this school district to be able to complete three college courses before they start high school, and soon, the district plans to offer other courses, such as sociology and ethnic studies, said Beatriz Chaidez, the chancellor for the community college district.
Middle schoolers have long been eligible to enroll in college classes in California, though only a few, high-achieving students actually do it. By offering a college class at a middle school — especially one in a high-poverty area — the community college district is looking to make that enrollment easier. The class is taught by a middle school staff member, and it's reserved exclusively for middle school students.
But with so few programs, there is little research about whether students are benefitting, and the local faculty union is worried middle school students might not be ready.
Chaidez disagrees. 'Navigating (college) as early as middle school is unheard of in their community,' she said. 'So when they experience success, it really motivates them to continue.'
California is increasingly pushing high schools to offer community college classes directly to students during the regular school day, a set-up known as 'dual enrollment.' Unlike AP classes, which include expensive exams and are limited to certain subjects and high-performing students, these community college classes cover a range of topics and are open to all students. By 2030, California Community Colleges Chancellor Sonya Chiristian wants all high school students to graduate with at least four college courses completed.
Chaidez wants to go further. She wants every local high school student to be able to complete about 20 college courses by the time they graduate — enough to earn an associate's degree.
CalMatters reached out to the college district's faculty union, which was surprised to learn the district is offering classes at a middle school.
'This opens up some problems,' said Jessica Breheny, an English professor and the union's vice president. 'I'm sure there are 12-year-olds that are college-ready, but there are just less of them and it's less likely. Developmentally, they have other things going on.'
Research shows that high schoolers who take college classes are more likely to attend college and graduate, but there's little research on how middle school students fare, said John Fink, a senior researcher at Columbia University's Community College Research Center. 'Nationally, and in most states, this is very, very rare, and in many states this is not allowed.' Instead, he said the focus is typically on enrolling more 10th, 11th and 12th graders in college courses.
A college-level course, with a few middle school games
About 10% of California's high school students took a community college class in the 2021-22 school year, according to an analysis by professors at UC Davis using the most recent data. California's community college system doesn't track how many middle school students take college courses.
So far, the Mount Pleasant Elementary School District, which includes August Boeger Middle School, offers only one college course, called 'Career Planning,' and it's almost indistinguishable from any other class on its campus. The college course is taught in a regular middle school classroom, and the professor, Oscar Lamas, already works at the middle school, where he's a counselor. Perhaps the only noticeable difference is the timing: The middle school day ends at 2:30 p.m. and Lamas' course starts at 2:45. He's paid separately by the community college to teach the course.
Career Planning helps students learn about career paths, practice resume-writing and learn psychological theories related to professional success. A governing board of college district professors, known as the Academic Senate, sets the objectives for each college course, but Lamas has broad discretion in teaching it. The Academic Senate responsible for setting the parameters of Lamas' course did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
The dean of the community college's counseling department, Victor Garza, refused an interview request from CalMatters but issued a written statement. Garza said the middle school class is akin to other dual enrollment courses, which maintain the college's 'academic rigor.'
'Some adjustments might be needed to cater to the unique needs and experiences' of students, he added.
On a Thursday before spring break, Lamas tries to make his class more fun by breaking the students into five teams to play a Jeopardy-style quiz game on the topic of the day, Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs.
Natalie Mendoza, 14, becomes the default spokesperson of her team, named the 'Tacos R Us Club,' but she answers the first question wrong, putting her team back 300 points and prompting her classmates to burst into chatter and analyze their mistakes.
As part of the class, she has to study a career, write a short essay about it and present it at a career fair. She picked intellectual property law. 'A lot of people say I'm assertive,' she said. 'I think that's a really good trait for a lawyer, and I think it'd be fun to fight for people who have created stuff.'
Natalie said she'd be the first in her family to attend college but she's already planning to go and has a few schools in mind, including UC Berkeley and San Jose State. If she does attend one of those schools, her grade in this counseling class would be part of her official college transcript.
Breheny, with the union, said she's concerned about the quality of the classes, especially once the college district begins teaching other subjects, such as ethnic studies.
'Faculty designed their courses for adult learners,' Breheny said. An ethnic studies class may cover topics such as sexual violence and genocide, she added — topics that may be difficult to convey to a middle schooler. 'Some of the material assumes a certain knowledge about the world, about politics, which you may not have at 11, 12, 13 years old.'
High schools offer few dual enrollment classes
August Boeger Middle School sits at the base of the Diablo Range mountains, tucked between the ranch-style homes and strip malls that color East San Jose. Teachers and staff greet each other with mucho gusto instead of hello. All around the open-air campus, murals tell the story of the region's multi-cultural heritage, especially its Mexican and Chicano roots.
That celebration of culture is a direct response to a history of adversity, Lamas said. 'East San Jose has always been a marginalized, disadvantaged environment.' As a result, schools in the community contend with education disparities, he said, such as a high dropout rate and a high teen pregnancy rate.
Offering a college class to these middle school students allows them to 'see a possibility for their future that doesn't exist within these walls here' and can inspire them to reach for a higher goal, said Marisa Peña, a school advisor.
Male students, Black and Latino students and students from rural areas are underrepresented in the community college courses offered at California's school districts. California lawmakers have signed numerous bills in the hopes of expanding access but certain regions in the state, such as Los Angeles, enroll a higher percentage of students.
Natalie said she hopes to continue taking college courses when she starts at Mount Pleasant High School this fall, which is just around the corner from her middle school. But her options are limited.
Mount Pleasant High School offers just three community college courses, which serve about 10% of the school's roughly 1,000 students, said Kyle Kleckner, the school district's director of instructional services. All of the classes are in 'multimedia' studies, he said, which teaches students how to create their own podcasts or YouTube channels, along with other digital marketing skills.
Although Mount Pleasant High School's dual enrollment is about on par with the state average, it trails other districts in the region. Less than 20 miles away, at high schools in the Milpitas Unified School District, roughly 25% of students enrolled in a community college class in 2021-22, according to the UC Davis analysis.
Finding professors to teach middle school
Part of the dual enrollment challenge is finding qualified college professors who are willing and able to work at a high school or middle school. Existing middle and high school teachers are allowed to teach college courses but they have to meet the qualifications, which usually include a master's degree in the area of instruction. Most of California's high school and middle school instructors lack a master's degree, according to a study by the Public Policy Institute of California.
'We have graduation requirements that students have to accomplish,' Kleckner said. 'The trick is finding that community college course that also fulfills those requirements and also finding a teacher who can teach it.' He said Mount Pleasant High School is committed to expanding the number of college courses but noted that it's smaller and therefore has fewer teachers who meet the requirements to teach a college course.
In turn, many college professors lack experience teaching children, said Breheny, who teaches at San Jose City College. 'We have had some problems already with dual enrollment where faculty have gone to different (high schools) to teach and have dealt with classroom management issues that they wouldn't have in a college course.' In one case, she said a college faculty member saw bullying in a high school classroom but didn't feel equipped to respond.
Lamas has a master's degree, which is required for most school counselors. He's gentle with the middle school students in his class, occasionally awarding points in the Jeopardy game even when the answer isn't perfect. Lamas had two quiz games planned that day, each one covering a different topic, but the first game took up almost all of the class time.
He ends class by taking questions about the upcoming final project. Although spring break is minutes away, the students sit still through the final minutes, except for the occasional joke and bursts of laughter. Not a single phone was in sight.
Once class ends, however, chatter ensues, the students pull out their phones, and staff escort them to the parking lot. While they may be taking a college course, they still must wait for their parents to pick them up.
___
This story was originally published by CalMatters and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
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Woman Finds Perfume in the Apartment After Signing Her New Lease. How She Honors the Late Tenant Goes Viral (Exclusive)
Woman Finds Perfume in the Apartment After Signing Her New Lease. How She Honors the Late Tenant Goes Viral (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Woman Finds Perfume in the Apartment After Signing Her New Lease. How She Honors the Late Tenant Goes Viral (Exclusive)

After moving into a rent-stabilized apartment in Queens, Jesse Lynn Hart found two vintage perfume bottles left behind by the late tenant who had lived there for more than four decades, and she asked her landlord to let her keep them She captured the moment of spraying the scent in the empty apartment on TikTok, reflecting on the shared experience of girlhood The response deepened Jesse Lynn's sense of community and connection, inspiring her to engage more with her neighbors and cherish the small ways we honor those who came before usWhen Jesse Lynn Harte moved into her new Astoria apartment, she wasn't expecting to inherit a legacy. But as she stood in the quiet, freshly painted space, alone for the first time, she sprayed a vintage perfume into the air — and felt an invisible bond with the woman who lived there before her. 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Chinese students flocked to Central Illinois. Their food followed.
Chinese students flocked to Central Illinois. Their food followed.

Boston Globe

time7 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Chinese students flocked to Central Illinois. Their food followed.

For the more than 6,000 students from China in Urbana and Champaign, the wealth of products and dishes from back home can make the two cities seem like a mirage rising from the plains of central Illinois. Surrounded by miles of flat, green fields of soy and grain corn, the cities have a combined population of about 127,000 people and a skyline that rarely pokes above 15 stories. The area isn't anybody's idea of a major metropolitan center. It certainly isn't the first place you'd think to look when you are in the mood for serious Chinese food. Get Winter Soup Club A six-week series featuring soup recipes and cozy vibes, plus side dishes and toppings, to get us all through the winter. Enter Email Sign Up After a quick walk from the university's main quad, though, you can sit down to a faithful rendition of spicy bullfrog hot pot in a Sichuanese broth studded with green peppercorns. 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But the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is in a virtual tie for second place with the University of Southern California, according a New York Times analysis of 2023 visa data from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Related : Urbana and Champaign are not the only places where the surge in international students has changed the local culture and economy. But the area's rural isolation and unusually large population of Chinese students make it a striking example of that change. Advertisement In the coming months or years, they may also make it something of a laboratory for the effects of the Trump administration's cuts to research budgets and clampdowns on visas for international students, especially those from China. Feast in a cornfield College-age students in China have a nickname for the University of Illinois: yu mi de . It means the Cornfield. The university is better known there for its surrounding farmland and its strengths in STEM fields like engineering and computer science than for its proximity to crunchy Northern-style stir-fried pork intestines. Each August, hundreds of new Chinese students show up with no inkling that the Cornfield is full of foods they grew up on. More than 270,000 students from China attended American colleges and universities last year. Restaurants catering to them represent a new wave in Chinese dining in the United States. In Manhattan, the blocks around NYU and Columbia, which 20 years ago held little appeal to fans of Chinese food, have become troves of Shanghai drunken crab and Hong Kong-style barbecue pork buns. You can find high-level Chinese cooking near campuses in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Iowa City, Iowa. They are more cosmopolitan than the linoleum-floored joints in the old urban Chinatowns that started out feeding home-style cooking to villagers from Guangdong in the early 20th century. They are more up-to-date than the palaces of aristocratic Chinese cuisine overseen by highly trained chefs who fled the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and '70s. Aimed at younger customers whose memories of China are still fresh, they tend to be informal, fairly inexpensive if not rock-bottom cheap, and faithful in recreating true regional cuisines. Advertisement Dishes at Northern Cuisine include crispy pork in sweet and sour glaze, stewed pork belly in a toasted bun and wok-fried crispy pork intestine with dry chili, in Champaign. ANJALI PINTO/NYT Students in Urbana and Champaign trade intel on regional dishes in group texts in Chinese on the social-media apps RedNote and WeChat. 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Consulates were told to give priority to applicants bound for schools where international students make up less than 15% of the total. That statistic at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is above 20%. Chinese nationals, who made up more than a quarter of the 1.1 million international students in the United States last year, face extra scrutiny. In May, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the government would 'aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students.' Whether tighter screening and delays will cut into the number of international students at the University of Illinois in the coming academic year won't be clear until September, said Robin Kaler, an associate chancellor. Advertisement Until then, faculty, administrators and local businesses are bracing for the impact. A significant drop could have a major economic effect on college towns like Urbana and Champaign. 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If significant numbers of them aren't allowed into the United States, or decide to study in a country that feels more welcoming, 'the general consensus is that they'll need to change the flavors, change the menu and how they present themselves,' he said. For instance, the noodle shop that sells Changsha stinky tofu just added grilled meat skewers and other, more entry-level items to its late-night menu. 'Everyone is buckled up right now,' Chao said. Many long-term residents are hoping that their favorite restaurants stick around and stay interesting. 'This cultural richness enhances us all,' said Leslie Cooperband, a retired cheesemaker who lives in Champaign, after we shared some very good three-cup chicken at Golden Harbor, a Taiwanese and Chinese landmark so celebrated that an indie-rock band wrote a song about it. Advertisement 'It's like, wow, look at what we have here in this town of 100,000 people,' she said. 'And we're all better for it.' This article originally appeared in .

Washington bans sale of a common plant, deems it noxious weed
Washington bans sale of a common plant, deems it noxious weed

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Washington bans sale of a common plant, deems it noxious weed

This story was originally published on The sale of a common plant will soon be illegal in Washington. Washington added Common (English) Ivy and Atlantic/Boston Ivy to its list of noxious weeds, which prohibits the sale and distribution of the plants, according to the Washington State Department of Agriculture's (WSDA) website. The weed threatens trees by taking away sunlight, Susan Hutton, executive director of the Whatcom Million Trees Project, told The Bellingham Herald. 'English ivy is kind of an equal opportunity creeper,' Hutton said, according to the media outlet. 'It will come to a tree and it will start to climb it, and as it climbs the tree, it starts to compete with the tree's leaves for sunlight, and in the process, it gradually weakens the tree. Once ivy gets up into the crown of a tree, it's almost certain to kill the tree in a short period of time.' Ivy also increases the risk of trees falling in storms, as the vines add extra weight, King County stated on its website. Common and Atlantic Ivy can outgrow native plants on the forest floor, shrub layer, and canopy. 'When ivy takes over, it reduces animal foraging habitat,' King County wrote on its website. 'It makes it difficult for understory plants to grow and kills understory and overstory trees by shading them out.' The sap of ivy stems can also cause skin irritation for some people. Although the plant is quite a nuisance, it stemmed an idea to solve another annoying issue. A few years ago, former KIRO Newsradio host Dave Ross had the idea to use ivy to prevent graffiti. 'I noticed that along I-5 downtown, the areas with no graffiti have one thing in common: ivy. Ivy has spilled over the top of the retaining wall! Vandals want a clear canvas, and the ivy ruins that. So what we need is to cover everything with ivy,' Ross wrote on MyNorthwest. The idea stuck with KIRO Newsradio Traffic Reporter Chris Sullivan, who brought it to the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) last year. He found out the City of Tacoma tried installing fake ivy in a handful of spots to combat graffiti. 'We had what we call the panels, which are a one-by-one foot panel of ivy, and then we have individual strands of it as well,' Rae Bailey, a Public Works Division Manager in Tacoma, said. 'We tried both of them in various areas throughout the city to mixed reviews.' Unfortunately, the panels didn't work well, but the individual strands of the fake plant did. 'We've had a couple of the strand areas get tagged in the last year or two, but for the most part, everything that we put up by the strands is doing its job,' Bailey said. Tacoma was planning to continue the fake ivy project, but then the pandemic hit, and it was no longer a top priority. The city was looking to start the project again, but the vendor went out of business, and unfortunately, the material was too expensive to install in large sections. As for the real plant, the ban will go into effect on Aug. 9. Contributing: Chris Sullivan, KIRO Newsradio Follow Julia Dallas on X. Read her stories here. Submit news tips here.

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