Realizing Equitable Access to Rigorous College-Preparatory Coursework

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Realizing Equitable Access to Rigorous College-Preparatory Coursework
Language: English
Authors: Awilda Rodriguez, Campaign for College Opportunity
Source: Campaign for College Opportunity. 2025.
Availability: Campaign for College Opportunity. 714 West Olympic Blvd Suite 745, Los Angeles, CA 90015. Tel: 213-744-9434; Fax: 877-207-3560; e-mail: info@collegecampaign.org; Web site: http://collegecampaign.org
Peer Reviewed: N
Page Count: 34
Publication Date: 2025
Sponsoring Agency: William T. Grant Foundation
Document Type: Reports - Evaluative
Tests/Questionnaires
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Secondary Education
High Schools
Descriptors: College Students, Minority Group Students, Low Income Students, Access to Education, Equal Education, College Preparation, College Bound Students, Hispanic Americans, African American Students, Asian American Students, American Indian Students, Pacific Islanders, Inclusion, Barriers, Advanced Placement, Dual Enrollment, School Counseling, School Policy, Course Selection (Students)
Abstract: Over 50% of American students in our public schools are Latinx, Black, Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI), or American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN). Tapping into their talent and ensuring their access to a college education is essential to our future economic power and the success of a multi-racial democracy. Yet, despite the historical exclusion and current underrepresentation of many Americans in our colleges and universities--including those who are first-generation, undocumented, or low-income--anti-equity forces continually threaten to regress the nation back into a pre-civil rights era of darkness and exclusion. This brief examines the importance of access to college-prep coursework in high school; barriers facing Latinx, Black, underrepresented Asian American, NHPI, and AIAN students in the U.S. who are trying to enroll and succeed in these courses; and the implications of those barriers on students' access to four-year college degrees. This examination is followed by recommendations for state, system, and school leaders who seek to ensure equitable access to college-prep curricula.
Abstractor: ERIC
Entry Date: 2026
Accession Number: ED678045
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:Over 50% of American students in our public schools are Latinx, Black, Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI), or American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN). Tapping into their talent and ensuring their access to a college education is essential to our future economic power and the success of a multi-racial democracy. Yet, despite the historical exclusion and current underrepresentation of many Americans in our colleges and universities--including those who are first-generation, undocumented, or low-income--anti-equity forces continually threaten to regress the nation back into a pre-civil rights era of darkness and exclusion. This brief examines the importance of access to college-prep coursework in high school; barriers facing Latinx, Black, underrepresented Asian American, NHPI, and AIAN students in the U.S. who are trying to enroll and succeed in these courses; and the implications of those barriers on students' access to four-year college degrees. This examination is followed by recommendations for state, system, and school leaders who seek to ensure equitable access to college-prep curricula.