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Trip Report

Preparing Rural Students for Success Beyond High School

A Field Trip — Raleigh, North Carolina, February 15-17, 2010

 

Overview

The American Youth Policy Forum (AYPF) brought a group of federal policy leaders to North Carolina to examine how rural education systems are providing high quality instruction and improving the readiness of young people for life beyond high school. This fact finding mission is part of a series of trips planned for policymakers to improve policy for college and career readiness and success, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Trip participants included Congressional staff, Department of Education officials, and representatives of national education organizations. Discussions and site visits provided rich examples of how resources are being utilized to address the challenges facing rural areas. Participants learned about how federal and state policies and funding streams affect rural school districts; the unique challenges of providing high quality instruction in rural settings; and innovative approaches to providing comprehensive education in rural communities.

This learning exchange took place starting on the evening of Monday, February 15th, and concluded on the evening of Wednesday, February 17th.  In addition to discussions with school leadership, educators, and students during our site visits, trip participants also heard from high-level state and local policy leaders, as well as other stakeholders committed to improving college access and preparedness for life for all of North Carolina’s youth.

Trip participants visited two innovative rural high schools that are leveraging state and local resources to provide a high quality, comprehensive education to youth.  Site visits included Warren New Tech High School in Warren County and Sampson Early College High School in Sampson County.  Warren County New Tech High, open since 2007, is a small, redesigned high school that engages students in project-based learning. Warren New Tech is one of three high schools that students may choose to attend in a district of approximately 2,800 students in northeastern North Carolina. Sampson Early College High was opened in 2005 on the campus of Sampson Community College, and enables students to gain postsecondary credit and training in careers important to the local economy while they are in high school. Sampson County serves approximately 8,000 students in south-central North Carolina.

Click here to read the full report (Policy Brief) on this study mission

Field trip participants reconvened in April for a meeting on Capitol Hill to  discuss the lessons learned from the visit to North Carolina. Trip participants shared how this learning experience focused on rural education has since informed their work on current policy initiatives with considerations for how rural school districts will be affected.

 

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

 

TRIP RESOURCES:

 

RURAL EDUCATION RESOURCES:

CONTACTS

Ben Aiken
Program Associate
American Youth Policy Forum
1836 Jefferson Pl
Washington, DC 20036
(202) 775-9731
baiken@aypf.org

Andrea Browning

Program Associate

American Youth Policy Forum

1836 Jefferson Pl

Washington, DC, 20036

(202) 775-9731

abrowning@aypf.org

Betsy Brand
Executive Director
American Youth Policy Forum
1836 Jefferson Pl
Washington, DC 20036
(202) 775-9731

 

 

 

 

 

   The American Youth Policy Forum (AYPF), a nonprofit, nonpartisan professional development organization based in Washington, DC, provides learning opportunities for policy leaders, practitioners, and researchers working on youth and education issues at the national, state, and local levels.

AYPF events and publications are made possible by a consortium of philanthropic foundations: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, William T. Grant Foundation, Charles S. Mott Foundation, and others.