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Michael Wald: Good Education Policy Alone Can't Get All Students to College

Release Date: 
December 9, 2013

In this interview, Stanford University Professor of Law Michael Wald argues that parenting is of critical importance to student success. He estimates that approximately 50% of children born each year in the United States will graduate from high school, continue through college, and become self-sufficient and productive citizens. Another 30% will graduate from high school but not go on to college and will struggle to maintain financial stability. For these students, changes in education quality would make a great difference. For the remaining 20%—those who will drop out of high school—improvements in education quality are not enough: These students and their parents need deeper supports, especially during the critical formative years between 0 and 5.

This interview followed Wald's SCOPE Brown Bag Lecture: "Improving Educational Outcomes By Improving Parenting" on December 9, 2013.