Democratizing dual enrollment: Beyond economic rationales

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.31.7580

Keywords:

dual enrollment, purpose of education, neoliberalism, democracy, state policy, curriculum

Abstract

Dual enrollment (DE) is a popular reform in the United States that allows high school students to take college courses through partnerships between school districts and institutions of higher education. DE programs have been scaling rapidly, but participation is stratified by race and class, and research reveals little about the quality and content of DE courses. These limitations stem, in part, from a lack of theorizing around what purpose DE reform can and should serve, both in the lives of youth and for communities writ large. Situated in literature on the purpose of education in capitalist democracies, this study employs qualitative content analysis to examine the rationales for DE coursework, as depicted in state-level policy documents. Findings indicate that DE policy rationales are depicted almost entirely in neoliberal economic terms. We argue that, while economic benefits are important, the almost exclusive emphasis on economic outcomes has led to rapid scaling of a curricular reform with insufficient attention to teaching, learning, and equity. To maximize the potential benefits of DE reform, we call for imagining its democratic possibilities.

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Author Biographies

Julia C. Duncheon, University of Washington

Julia C. Duncheon is an associate professor in the area of educational foundations, leadership, and policy at the University of Washington. Her research broadly focuses on issues of college access, transition, and equity, with a focus on underserved student populations. She uses qualitative methods to study how school and college contexts shape postsecondary opportunity for students who have been historically excluded from higher education. Recent projects have focused on the implementation of dual enrollment and early college high schools, with particular attention to whether and how these reforms support rigorous, equitable, and culturally relevant teaching and learning at the classroom level.

Dustin Hornbeck, University of Memphis

Dustin Hornbeck is an assistant professor at the University of Memphis. He studies evolving curricular trends in secondary education that influence the democratic objectives of education. This encompasses areas such as dual enrollment, credentialism, restrictions on critical thinking and perspectives, and educational policy shifts that indoctrinate/alienate students. Beyond this, his broader research interests span policy changes in secondary education, experiences of LGBTQ students, the role of democracy in education, federalism, transitions to college, and equity issues in dual enrollment.

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Published

2023-11-21

How to Cite

Duncheon, J. C., & Hornbeck, D. (2023). Democratizing dual enrollment: Beyond economic rationales. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 31. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.31.7580

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Articles