Code.org, CSTA and ECEP Issue Annual Snapshot of the State of Computer Science Education, Urges Additional States to Adopt Policies to Ensure Equitable Access for All Students
SEATTLE, Sept. 21, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- While the percentage of U.S. high schools offering foundational computer science coursework has increased year-over-year and over time, there remain significant gaps in access, particularly among historically underrepresented and underserved students, according to a report released today by Code.org, the Computer Science Teachers Association, and the Expanding Computing Education Pathways Alliance. However, states with a graduation requirement for computer science see stronger participation from groups historically underrepresented in computer science.
The annual report, the 2022 State of Computer Science Report commends the states that have adopted policies to ensure equitable access to computer science for all students and urges other states to follow suit. It puts forward nine policy recommendations, one of which is to allow a computer science credit to satisfy a core graduation requirement, to guide state leaders forward.
"Computer science is a foundational subject that is critical to the nation's economic and security health. Yet many students still do not have access to this foundational subject, and even when it is offered in schools, the enrollment is not reflective of the broader student population," said Code.org CEO Hadi Partovi. "We are beginning to see the positive results of states adopting policies to ensure equitable access for all students, and we must continue to build on the groundswell of support from students, teachers, business leaders, and governors."
Among the key findings, the annual report shows:
"South Carolina has seen firsthand the powerful results of policy making when it comes to computer science. Since the state began requiring computer science coursework to graduate high school, we've seen a culture shift around computer science education and many positive results for students," said South Carolina Superintendent of Education Molly Spearman.
The release of the annual report builds on a national effort by business, education and government leaders to emphasize the importance of computer science education. In recent months, more than 800 CEOs, nonprofit leaders, and educators issued a call to action encouraging states to make computer science part of the K-12 curriculum, and 50 governors of U.S. states and territories signed the Governor's Compact for Computer Science, committing to expanding computer science education in their states.
View the full report findings here.
Bringing together more than 70 industry, non-profit, and advocacy organizations, the Code.org Advocacy Coalition is growing the movement to make computer science a fundamental part of K?12 education.
The Computer Science Teachers Association (CSTA) is a membership organization that supports and promotes the teaching of computer science. CSTA provides opportunities for K?12 teachers and their students to better understand computer science and to more successfully prepare themselves to teach and learn.
The Expanding Computing Education Pathways (ECEP) Alliance is an NSF-funded Broadening Participation in Computing Alliance (NSF-CNS-1822011). ECEP seeks to increase the number and diversity of students in computing and computing-intensive degrees by promoting state-level computer science education reform. Working with the collective impact model, ECEP supports an alliance of 22 states and Puerto Rico to identify and develop effective educational interventions and expand state-level infrastructure to drive educational policy change.
SOURCE Code.org
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