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Student Well-being and the Academic Progress of Schools

Date Archived: 12/10/2003
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While emphasis on accountability may help some students boost test scores, others are being left behind. This online presentation will examine how health and environmental factors affect student achievement.
Though new standards, curricula, teaching techniques, and other types of practices are indispensable for improving academic performance, not all students will benefit from these reforms. This webcast will explore how nonacademic factors -- substance use, exposure to violence, exercise, nutrition, school climate, and safety -- impede students' academic progress. Using longitudinal, school-level test score data and data from the state-sponsored California Healthy Kids Survey (CHKS), the presenter will lead participants through discussions that will examine the research and its implications for policymakers and educators. Participants will learn the extent to which student exposure to health risks and low levels of developmental supports or hinders test scores and discuss solutions to the ongoing problem.

Primary Presenters

Tom Hanson, Senior Research Associate, WestEd



Related Materials

Health Risks, Resilience, and the Academic Performance Index
Student Well-being and the Academic Progress of Schools
Web Script for Event