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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Morales
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/31/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Middle School College & Career Preparation
SB 490
ANALYST Dearing
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$500.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Higher Education Department (HED)
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 490 appropriates $500 thousand from the general fund to the Higher Education
department for the purpose of developing a collaborative college and career preparation
campaign focused on middle school students.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $500 thousand contained in Senate Bill 490 is a recurring expense to the
General Fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY09 shall
revert to the General Fund.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The educational pipeline conceptualizes the cumulative success of students progressing through
high school, college entry, and persistence to a baccalaureate degree. New Mexico ranked 50th
in cumulative success in a 2004 National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education policy
alert, with only 10-to-11 percent of high school freshmen attaining a college degree. Students are
lost at the transition points, the majority failing to graduate from high school. Minority and low
income students are disproportionately represented among these dropouts. Efforts to increase
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Senate Bill 490 – Page
2
college graduates in the state must be collaborative yet focus at creating a rigorous middle
school curriculum, improving high school graduation rates, and improving second year retention
in higher education institutions. Aligning high school exit requirements with entrance to higher
education can include introducing high school and middle school students to a more rigorous
curriculum and can be accomplished through several accelerated learning options.
- 9 out of 10 middle school parents expect their children to go to college, but more than
80% reported they don’t know what specific steps are necessary to get them there;
- more than 45% of parents surveyed had not taken any of the college planning actions
asked in the survey;
- more than a 1/3 of parents reported having no sources of information on college
preparation or admission;
- less than 20% of parents reported taking steps such as researching colleges, meeting with
teachers or counselors, and looking into the college admissions process – all critical
parts of the college enrollment process.
1
Of note, the Higher Education department response specifies this request was not submitted to
the department for re-view and is not included in the department’s funding recommendation for
FY09.
Numerous middle school outreach programs exist at New Mexico’s higher education institutions,
funded as research and public service programs (RPSP). LFC conducted a review of over the
interim and concluded several findings, including:
• Multiple RPSP programs provide the same type of services indicating poor coordination even
within institutions and duplicate funding.
Outreach Funding. Outreach programs generally seek to increase the interest of
high school students in learning and attending college. They may target a
specific ethnic group (Hispanics, Native Americans, African Americans, etc.), a
particular academic discipline (science, math, engineering, nursing, law, fine
arts, etc.) or a particular region of a state. Similarly, they may occur in a variety
of settings: in the high school, on campus, at statewide events (i.e. science fairs)
or at national conferences.
There are two qualitatively different approaches to funding and managing
outreach programs: line item programs and centrally coordinated programs.
New Mexico generally offers line item programs. The most common model for
providing outreach services was central funding and coordination through a
statewide agency. For example, California and Oklahoma offer Academic
Preparation and Summer Academies programs respectively.
2
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
If enacted, the LFC recommends that the Higher Education department submit a plan for
1
According to the Higher Education Department, From Aspirations to Action: The Role of Middle School Parents in Making the Dream of
College a Reality; Institute of Higher Education Policy, November 2007
2
Excerpt from LFC, Review of Selected Research and Public Service Projects - January 12, 2008
http://legis.state.nm.us/lcs/lfc/lfcdocs/perfaudit/HED%20RPSP%20final.pdf
pg_0003
Senate Bill 490 – Page
3
program evaluation with specific program goals and criteria for assessing the effectiveness and
provide suggested outputs, outcomes and performance measures to evaluate the performance of
state government programs as prescribed in the Accountability in Government Act.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
According to the Higher Education department’s response, the department would work to
collaborate with other state education agencies, non-profit organizations focusing on college
access programs and private organizations that support education outreach activities targeting the
middle school population throughout the State of New Mexico.
PD/bb