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College District Sign “Historic” Agreement

By Olin Ericksen
Staff Writer

May 22 -- Billed as the beginning of a new era of collaboration, School District and Santa Monica College officials Monday signed an agreement to help high school students who never gave college a thought find their way to a secondary education.

Ultimately aimed at helping close a well-documented achievement gap between rich and poor, white and minority students, Santa Monica College President Dr. Chui L. Tsang and Santa Monica-Malibu United School District Superintendent Dianne Talarico put pen to paper on a host of new agreements between the two local institutions.

Santa Monica College President Dr. Chui L. Tsang and Santa Monica-Malibu United School District Superintendent Dianne Talarico sign agreement at District headquarters Monday. (Photo by Olin Ericksen)

From use of athletic fields and classrooms to unprecedented access to professors and courses at the college for some still too young to drive, District students will be the ones to primarily benefit from several new initiatives that could be in place as early as the next school year, officials said.

Money to fund the new programs, officials noted, still needs to be secured from outside sources.

"The signing of this agreement today is just the first step of many, many collaborative projects we want to work on in the future," said Tsang, who sat with Talarico at District headquarters flanked by staff and board members from both the College and District.

"This is an historic move that greatly increases college course offerings to an even wider variety of high school students in the unified school district," said Tsang.

"We want to make sure that all of our kids have access and are prepared so they can make a choice about whether or not they can attend college," said Talarico.

"The (agreement) represents a natural collaboration between our two academic institutions and will provide the groundwork for increased success for our high school students, increasing the number of students wishing to pursue post-secondary education."

Preparing High school students early on in English and math courses, expanding college-level classes in primary education, increasing career and technical education programs at the College and offering more summer courses at the College for teens are some of the programs included in the agreement.

Perhaps the most difficult programs to initiate, also could be the most important in helping economically disadvantaged students go to college, officials said.

The High School Transfer Academy would target junior and seniors who are "first-generation college attendees" to enroll them in simultaneously in the College and high school.

"The intent is to look at the first generation college attendees," said Dr. Sally Chou, The District’s chief academic officer. "That's our first priority, and then (to look) at students who are less affluent, or less fortunate."

Scheduled to begin next year with 100 high school freshmen who will be tracked through graduation, a separate program dubbed an "Early College High School Program," would give students grades 9 though 12 a chance to develop an academic theme, learn research-based study techniques and use technology.

While detail have yet to be worked out, school officials said they would work with the community, parents and faculty to chart a course for the program.

"The goal is one hundred students a year," said Talarico, who said the program has been instituted in several other communities nationwide.

"It has been more successful in some places than others," she said.

Chou -- who Talarico said was hired as a "task-master" to help push through the agreement -- said both the Early College High School Program and High School Transfer Academy are aimed at helping address a longstanding problem in California schools.

"We are trying to close that achievement gap," said Chou. "We have to target those groups of students who traditionally have not had that opportunity."

As for funding, District officials said they will need to press for outside help, because neither the District nor the College plans to dip into their general funds for the initiatives.

"We have to go out and get grants," said Cho.

The next step, said Talarico will be to bring the programs to the community and, perhaps more importantly, the teachers and faculty to iron out the details.

"We have to get the faculty association and teacher's association at the table so we can look at whatever the obstacles and barriers are (there), so we can focus and increase the access for students that don't typically say that college is for them or that their parents don't know how to navigate the system for them," Talarico said.

 

"This is an historic move that greatly increases college course offerings to an even wider variety of high school students in the unified school district." Chui L. Tsang.

 

 

"We want to make sure that all of our kids have access and are prepared so they can make a choice about whether or not they can attend college." Dianne Talarico

 

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