Helping Middle School Students Make the Transition into High School

By Nancy B. Mizelle, ERIC Digest, August 1999, National Parent Information Network

Young adolescents entering high school look forward to having more choices and making new and more friends; however, they are also concerned about being picked on and teased by older students, having hard work, making lower grades, and getting lost in a larger, unfamiliar school (Mizelle, 1995; Phelan, Yu, & Davidson, 1994).

As young adolescents make the transition into high school, many experience a decline in grades and attendance (Barone, Aguirre-Deandreis, & Trickett, 1991); they view themselves more negatively and experience an increased need for friendships (Hertzog et al., 1996); and by the end of 10th grade, as many as six percent drop out of school (Owings & Peng, 1992). For middle school students, including those who have been labeled “gifted” or “high-achieving,” the transition into high school can be an unpleasant experience (Phelan, Yu, & Davidson, 1994).

Research has found, however, that when middle school students took part in a high school transition program with several diverse articulation activities, fewer students were retained in the transition grade (MacIver, 1990). Furthermore, middle school principals indicated that they expected fewer of their students to drop out before graduation when the school provided supportive advisory group activities or responsive remediation programs (MacIver & Epstein, 1991).

This Digest discusses how educators can eat students’ transition into high school by providing challenging and supportive middle school environments and by designing transition programs that address the needs of students and their parents and that facilitates communication between middle school and high school educators.

Middle School Environment

Providing young adolescents with activities that relate directly to the transition into high school certainly is important; however, providing young adolescents with a challenging and supportive middle school experience is equally important in their making a successful transition into high school (Belcher & Hatley, 1994; Mizelle, 1995; Oates, Flores, & Weishew, 1998). For example, Mizelle (1995) found that students who stayed together with the same teachers through sixth, seventh, and eighth grades and experienced more hands-on, life-related learning activities, integrated instruction, and cooperative learning groups were more successful in their transition to high school than were students from the same school who had a more traditional middle school experience.

Students also indicated that if their middle school teachers had held students more responsible for the learning, taught them more about strategies for learning on their own, and provided them a more challenging curriculum, their transition to high school would have been eased.

Similarly, in a comprehensive program at Sunrise Middle School in inner-city Philadelphia, Oates and her colleagues (1998) found that students who participated in a Community For Learning Program (CFL) were more successful in their transition into high school than students who had not participated in the CFL program. Key components of the CFL program were support and training for teachers, a learning management system designed to help middle school students develop a sense of responsibility for their own learning and behavior, and an emphasis on community and family involvement.

Transition Programs

According to MacIver (1990), a high school transition program includes a variety of activities that (1) provide students and parents of information about the new school, (2) provide students with social support during the transition, and (3) bring middle and high school personnel together to learn about one another’s curriculum and requirements.

Provide Information to Students and Parents

Middle school students want to know what high school is going to be like, and they and their parents need to know about and understand high school programs and procedures (Phelan, Yu, & Davidson, 1994). In particular, parents need to be actively involved in the decisions their eighth-graders are asked to make about classes they will take in ninth grade and understand the long-term effects of the course decisions (Paulson, 1994).

Some ways students can learn about high school include visiting the high school in the spring, perhaps to “shadow” a high school student; attending a presentation by a high school student or panel of students; visiting the high school in the fall for schedule information; attending a fall orientation assembly (preferably before school starts); and discussing high school regulations and procedures with eighth-grade teachers and counselors. In addition to face-to-face activities, a possible source of information is the Internet. High school students can, either as a class or club project, set up a Web page that would provide incoming students information on different high school activities and clubs and offer them an opportunity to get answers to any questions they may have from the “experts.”

Provide Social Support

At a time when friendships and social interaction are particularly important for young adolescents, the normative transition into high school often serves to disrupt friendship networks and, thereby, interferes with students’ success in high school (Barone et al., 1991). Thus, it is vital for transition programs to include activities that will provide incoming students social support activities that give students the opportunity to get to know and develop positive relationships with older students and other incoming students (Herzog et al., 1996; MacIver, 1990). A “Big Sister/Brother” Program that begins in eighth grade and continues through ninth, a spring social event for current incoming high school students, and writing programs where eighth-graders correspond with high school students are just a few ways that transition programs can give students social support. Middle and high school educators should also look for opportunities to develop more long-term activities such as peer mentoring or tutoring programs.

Bring Middle and High School Educators Together

Underlying successful high school transition programs are activities that bring middle school and high school administrators, counselors, and teachers together to learn about the programs, courses, curriculum, and requirements of their respective schools (Herzog et al., 1996; Vars, 1988). Activities that create a mutual understanding of curriculum requirements at both levels and of the young adolescent learner will help educators at both levels to develop a high school transition program to meet the particular needs of their students. In addition to the more typical committee or team meetings with representatives from each level, these activities may include K-12 curriculum planning meetings and teacher or administrator visitations, observations, and teaching exchanges.

Parent Involvement

The importance of parents being involved in their students’ transition from middle to high school can hardly be overestimated. When parents are involved in their student’s transition to high school, they tend to stay involved in their child’s school experiences (MacIver, 1990); and when parents are involved in their child’s high school experiences, students have higher achievement (Linver & Silverberg, 1987; Paulson, 1984), are better adjusted (Hartos & Power, 1997), and are less likely to drop out of school (Horn & West, 1992).

Parent involvement in the transition process to high school can be encouraged through a variety of activities. Parents may be invited to participate in a conference (preferably at the middle school) with their child and high school counselor to discuss course work and schedules, visit the high school with their child in the spring or the fall, spend a day at the high school to help them understand what their child’s life will be like, and help design and facilitate some of the articulation activities for students. In planning activities for parents, high school educators will want to remember that parents of students already in high school are an excellent resource for other parents and may also help to encourage new parents to be more involved in school activities. At the middle school level, teachers and administrators can inform parents about transition activities and encourage them to participate. Perhaps more importantly, they can keep parents involved in their child’s education and school activities during the middle school years so that they are comfortable “coming to school” and confident that their involvement makes a difference in their child’s academic success.

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