Monday, February 3, 2014

ETS Policy Notes: Black Male Teens: Moving to Success in the High School Years

ETS Policy Notes - Listening. Learning. Leading.


Dear Colleague:
During the high school years, teens lay the academic and social groundwork for their future. But too many of the 1.7 million young Black men, ages 14–18, spend those crucial years of schooling battling obstacles that can jeopardize their future college and career trajectories.
Steering Black male teens to success during their high school years was the topic of ETS's 17th Addressing Achievement Gaps Symposium. You will find timely discussions about these issues in the latest edition of ETS Policy Notes: Black Male Teens: Moving to Success in the High School Years.Published by ETS's Policy Information Center, this issue contains highlights from ETS's Achievement Gaps Symposium with the same title. ETS Policy Notes (Vol. 21, No. 3) is available at no cost to you here.
During the 2013 symposium, policymakers, practitioners and advocates focused on the latest research, strategies and college- and career-readiness models aimed at creating high schools that provide opportunities for Black males to succeed. The purpose was to highlight the unique challenges facing these young men and to examine the most effective practices for schools and communities to adopt to help close achievement gaps and foster college and career success.
ETS and the Children's Defense Fund were the co-conveners of "Black Male Teens: Moving to Success in the High School Years." This symposium was the third in a series of four symposia examining the education and status of black males, from birth to age 24.
The next ETS Achievement Gaps Symposium is "Advancing Success for Black Men in College." This event will be held Monday, June 23, 2014, in Washington, D.C.
We hope you found this information helpful. We look forward to your participation, and we'll be sure to keep you informed about upcoming events and publications.
Educational Testing Service
Rosedale Road
Princeton, NJ 08541

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