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Summer Training and Education Program (STEP)
Dropout Prevention

STEP was found to have no discernible effects on either staying in school or progressing in school.

Summer Training and Education Program (STEP) is a summer employment, academic remediation, and life skills program intended to reduce school dropout rates by addressing summer learning loss and preventing teen parenthood. The program serves low-income 14- and 15-year-olds who have tested below grade level in either reading or math. The program is integrated into the federal summer jobs program and is offered as sessions of 6–8 weeks in two consecutive summers. It includes part-time summer work at minimum wage, a daily reading and math curriculum, and “life skills and opportunities” classes that focus on topics such as sexual behavior, drug use, careers, and community involvement.

Findings

1
study that met standards out of
1
eligible study reviewed
Outcome
domain
Effectiveness Rating Grades Evidence Tier
Progressing in school No discernible effects 8-9
Staying in School Potentially negative effects 8-9

Last Updated: May 2009

Race

Asian
18%
Black
47%
Other or unknown
15%

Ethnicity

Hispanic
19%
Not Hispanic or Latino
81%

Gender

Male: 48%
Female: 52%

Delivery Method

whole class icon
Individual

Urbanicity

Suburban
Urban

Locations

MA, CA, OR, WA
Northeast, West
Note: This summary only includes data from studies that reported sample information. The Intervention Report may include evidence from other studies that met standards, but did not report sample information.


Related Resources

This intervention report was prepared for the WWC by Mathematica under contract ED-07-CO-0062.

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