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What is CAPP?
CAPP's Mission
The California Academic Partnership Program (CAPP) was established
by the California State Legislature in 1984 for the purpose
of developing "cooperative efforts to improve the academic
quality of public secondary schools with the objective of
improving the preparation of all students for college."
To achieve this end, CAPP supports the establishment of academic
partnerships between secondary schools and community colleges,
public or private baccalaureate degree-granting institutions,
and business enterprises aimed at:
- Transforming the relationships between educational institutions
in ways that directly benefit students;
- Improving curriculum in subject areas required for admission
to college;
- Strengthening teachers' capacities to enable all students
to learn the curriculum;
- Enhancing the ability of students to benefit from these
changes; and
- Improving postsecondary and business partners' understanding
of these students' unique needs.
Successful academic partnerships supported by CAPP are intended
to be real, durable and effective.
Real partnerships are those in which secondary and postsecondary
educators and participants from community and business partnerships
recognize their common interest in public school students
and work together as equals to meet these students' educational
needs.
Durable partnerships are those whose value to the
partner institutions has been internalized to the point that
maintenance of the collaborative relationship does not depend
on supplementary funding from external sources.
Effective partnerships are those that result in significant
improvement in the academic achievement of all students, particularly
of those most dependent upon the performance of the institution
to enable them to fulfill their individual educational potential.
Q: Does CAPP really make a difference?
A: Independent research has shown that students enrolled
in courses modified through CAPP curriculum projects or academic
support programs enroll in college preparatory courses and
enter college at rates significantly higher than students
not served by these programs.
More that 300,000 California students in 60 school districts
have benefited from CAPP partnerships.
AB 2398 (Hughes), CAPP's Originating Legislation Statement
of Intent
¤ Section 11000. Establishment of program; purpose; project
distribution.
There is hereby established the California Academic Partnership
Program, to be administered by the Trustees of the California
State University, in cooperation with the Regents of the University
of California, the Board of Governors of the California Community
Colleges, and the Superintendent of Public Instruction. The
purpose of the program shall be to develop cooperative efforts
to improve the academic quality of public secondary schools
with the objective of improving the preparation of all students
for college. Projects funded under the provisions of this
chapter may address improvements in secondary school curriculum
and the ability of students to benefit from these improvements.
Academic partnership projects shall be distributed throughout
the state in order to provide *** schools located in rural
, urban, and suburban areas with access to these services.
(Added by Stats, 1983, c. 498, ¤ 8, eff. July 28, 1983, operative
July 1, 1984. Amended by Stats. 1984, c. 620, ¤ 1, eff. Aug.
15, 1984.)
Go to entire document: California
Education Code, Chapter 11
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