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ECHS Benchmark 4
Academic Infrastructure

B4 Academic Infrastructure

Purpose of Academic Infrastructure

The Early College High School (ECHS) must provide a rigorous course of study that allows students the opportunity to earn a high school diploma and enable a student to combine high school courses and college-level courses with the goal of earning an associate degree or up to 60 semester credit hours toward a baccalaureate degree.

Design Elements

All ECHSs must implement and meet the following:

4.1 Regional Need

The ECHS shall explore how the ECHS academic plan and targeted postsecondary credentials connect with the local economic needs.

4.2 Postsecondary Opportunities 

The ECHS program must provide a rigorous course of study that allows students the opportunity to earn a high school diploma and enables a student to combine high school courses and college-level courses with the goal of earning an associate degree or up to 60 semester credit hours toward a baccalaureate degree.

4.3 Course Sequence
The ECHS program shall offer a course of study that provides a detailed and relevant course sequence to the postsecondary opportunities aligned to the high school and college courses provided to the ECHS students. This crosswalk must follow the courses and fields of study listed in the THECB Lower Division Academic Course Guide Manual (ACGM) and/or the Workforce Education Course Manual (WECM).
Artifacts Course Sequence Example File
icon file download Crosswalk aligning high school and college courses, grades 9 through 12, which enables a student to earn an associate degree or up to 60 college credit hours toward a baccalaureate degree
icon file download Master schedules
4.4 Course Offerings

The ECHS shall provide a variety of opportunities for students to earn college credit (e.g., a portfolio approach may include dual credit, Advanced Placement (AP), International Baccalaureate (IB), OnRamps, CLEP assessments, and local articulation agreements for specific courses in partnership with a local college) with applicability of college credits in mind.

4.5 Delivery of Courses

The campus may implement multiple dual enrollment delivery models, including, but not limited to the following:

  1. College courses taught on the college campus by college faculty
  2. College courses taught on the high school campus by college faculty
  3. College courses taught on the high school campus by high school educators who meet faculty requirements
  4. College courses taught virtually, via distance/online/blended learning
4.6 Academic Performance in High School

The ECHS shall implement a plan for End-of-Course (EOC) assessment success, including academic preparation classes for accepted students and academic interventions for students who do not pass EOC assessments.

4.7 College Readiness
The ECHS shall provide a TSI assessment to accepted students as early as incoming 9th graders. This assessment may not be used as a prerequisite for admissions to the ECHS.
  1. The ECHS shall publish on its website the dates, times, and location(s) for TSIA administration
  2. The ECHS shall provide assessment fee waivers for all administrations of the TSIA test
  3. The ECHS shall implement a plan for TSIA success, including academic preparation classes for accepted students and shall provide academic interventions (e.g., tutorials, workshops, testing strategies, accelerated instruction) for students who do not pass the TSIA before retesting
  4. The ECHS shall review TSIA testing data, particularly the number/percentage of students who have passed each section of the TSI assessment to prescribe accelerated instruction to support students
  5. The ECHS shall explore alternative measures for students to meet college readiness standards

Artifacts College Readiness Example File
icon file download Calendar of TSIA scheduled test administration dates, sign-up process, and intervention expectations
icon file download Calendar of TSIA scheduled test administration dates, sign-up process, and intervention expectations
4.8 Student Data Tracking 

The ECHS shall biannually implement structured data review processes to do the following:

  1. Identify student strengths and areas of growth and develop individual instructional support plans
  2. Provide an assessment for measuring student progress to ensure students are on track to meet the outcomes-based measures.
  3. Provide an opportunity for the IHE to provide feedback on the value of the ECHS program
4.9 Student Persistence

The ECHS shall create a plan for students off-track for success in the ECHS program. Support systems shall include infrastructure, resources, and personnel to enable every possibility to retain the student in the ECHS program and promote program completion.

4.10 Student Pathway Support 

The ECHS shall develop a plan to support direct-to-college student enrollment following high school graduation and a strategy to foster long-term workforce readiness.