State Governments Respond to Globalization
States are working on graduating high school students with highly relevant knowledge and skills. Photo: iStockPhoto.
State Governments Respond to Globalization
As states are redesigning high schools, some are revising
graduation requirements to include global skills. Others
are developing internationally themed high schools to
serve as models for how to produce students who are
college-ready and globally competent and as sources of
professional development.
- School districts in New York, California, Texas,
Colorado, and North Carolina, with support from
Asia Society and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,
are creating internationally themed secondary
schools to produce students who are college-ready
and globally competent, demonstrate the added
value of global competencies, and improve achievement
and increase graduation rates.
- The Arizona Department of Education, all three state
universities, and the Thunderbird School of Global
Management are working together to create pilot
schools of international studies in Arizona. The goal
is for students to begin learning a new world languagein kindergarten, a second language in sixth grade, and
a third language in ninth grade. The schools will also
include international content throughout the curriculum
as well as exchange programs.
- New York requires a course (typically two years) and
state assessment in Global History and Geography
to graduate with a Regents diploma.
- Pennsylvania is redesigning secondary education by
integrating technology-related professional development
to change teaching practices. It is also offering
dual enrollment programs through which high
school students can take college-level world language
and content classes.
- Texas has added an international dimension to its
statewide STEM (science, technology, engineering,
and math) schools initiative which includes the integration
of world knowledge across the curriculum
and the introduction of international benchmarks to
compare school progress.
Post new comment