Why Indianapolis Wants All Middle Schoolers to Take a College Visit
The strategy comes amid a statewide push to increase the rate of students choosing college after high school.
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IPS wants to make sure more of its students are exposed to college sooner.
That鈥檚 why district officials are setting a new expectation that every student completes at least one college visit each of their three years in middle school.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of research that shows that if a middle school-aged child is able to have access or get onto a college campus, then there is a significant increase in them feeling like it鈥檚 an attainable option,鈥 said Lori Hart, IPS鈥 K-8 elementary and middle school counseling coordinator.
IPS hopes to achieve this through a new .
More than 200 students from the district鈥檚 visited the IUPUI campus April 19 as part of a pilot of the program. The students were met with hands-on activities, such as creating their own zine with Herron School of Art & Design staff or examining organ dissections with pathology lab interns.
Longfellow student Melissa Austin was among about a dozen eighth graders who nodded along to Music and Arts Technology department adjunct instructor Michael Reynolds鈥 upbeat club remix of 鈥淧ump Up The Jam.鈥
Hart said students were chosen from the activities, which also included a Q&A with School of Education students, based on career interests they expressed to their teachers before the visit.
The visit comes as IPS as a part of the district鈥檚 reconfiguration plan and as the state grapples with .
Indiana hit its lowest college-going rate in a generation in 2020 with just 53% of graduating high schoolers choosing to go straight to college, according to . The rate has stayed flat since then.
Monica Medina, a clinical associate professor in IUPUI鈥檚 School of Education, said waiting until high school is often too late to introduce students to college experiences, especially for students who will be the first in their family to complete education beyond high school.
鈥淚ntroducing them to the opportunities, to the different options they may have, can help them think about what they鈥檙e doing in high school and the significance of high school,鈥 Medina said.
More than 1,000 middle schoolers are expected to participate in this spring鈥檚 pilot of the college visits program.Longfellow, Northwest, William Penn and Clarence Farrington schools are included in the spring pilot. The program is expected to expand to all other IPS middle schools next year and comes as the district shifts to a middle school model for sixth through eighth grades this fall under Rebuilding Stronger.
IPS has budgeted $25,200 for the program in the coming school year, according to . That includes funding for more than 80 field trips, reaching more than 5,200 students.
Partners in the effort include Butler University, IU Indianapolis, Ivy Tech Community College, Marian University, Martin University, the University of Indianapolis and Vincennes University鈥檚 Indianapolis Aviation Technology Center.
Hart said she hopes students take these experiences home with them to spark conversations in their families about what it means to go to college and how to prepare as a family for opportunities beyond high school.
鈥淭hey will have that core memory to take in the culture and just that feel of being on a college campus,鈥 Hart said. 鈥淚 hope they take away really exciting conversations to have with their family.鈥
This was originally published at Mirror Indy.
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