Opportunity Cadre
Students who take advanced courses are more likely to graduate from high school, earn college degrees, and experience economic mobility. Yet in Florida, enrollment in these courses remains unattainable for students who could succeed in them—driven by school-level practices, policies, and assumptions about student potential.
From summer 2023 to summer 2024, Impact Florida partnered with three large school districts—Duval (DCPS), Miami-Dade (M-DCPS), and Orange County (OCPS)—to increase enrollment in advanced coursework, including Advanced Placement (AP), the Cambridge Advanced program’s Advanced Subsidiary or Advanced level courses, Dual Enrollment (DE), and International Baccalaureate (IB).
Each district received funds and technical support to:
Districts chose between two models: designing their own interventions with guidance from Impact Florida or working with a national technical assistance provider with expertise in this area.
“Our collaboration through the Opportunity Cadre has been instrumental in reshaping our approach to advanced coursework.”
Some districts used student data, such as AP Potential reports coming from a 9th grade administration of the PSAT, to proactively identify students with the ability to succeed in advanced courses. These insights prompted shifts in enrollment practices—like automatic placement into AP courses—that removed passive barriers and encouraged more students to choose rigorous coursework.
Schools developed targeted outreach strategies by training the adults most trusted by students and leveraging survey data to connect with students on a personal level. This relationship-based advising approach helped students feel recognized and supported, making them more likely to enroll in advanced courses.
Some districts addressed practical obstacles by expanding access to dual enrollment courses on high school campuses and covering the cost of exams and instructional supplies for other accelerated programs. These changes helped ensure that students' participation in advanced coursework wasn’t limited by transportation challenges or financial constraints.
To build a schoolwide culture that values and supports advanced coursework, schools engaged families, empowered student ambassadors, and invested in educator development. These efforts equipped both students and staff with the tools, knowledge, and mindsets needed to expand access and challenge limiting assumptions about who belongs in rigorous courses.
“It’s one thing to speak to your entire ninth grade class and tell them about your advanced academics offerings... It’s another thing to… tell [specific] students, ‘This tells me you're ready. I'm empowering you to take the next step.’”
The Opportunity Cadre delivered both measurable enrollment increases and meaningful culture change.
Cadre participants also experienced a cultural shift. Schools began using data differently, empowering more students, and creating a new norm: advanced coursework is for everyone.
School leaders reported shifting from gatekeeping to inclusion. One district shifted to automatic enrollment of all 9th graders in AP Human Geography, establishing the expectation that every student could access rigorous coursework.
Teachers’ beliefs about student potential changed. In one district, AP teachers began recruiting students they had not previously considered, driven by AP Potential data and student surveys identifying trusted adults.
District staff reported new cross-departmental collaboration. One district broke down silos between Advanced Academics and Student Services.
1.
Simply offering advanced coursework isn't enough. Districts who actively identified students with potential—often using tools like AP Potential or 9th-grade PSAT data—ensured eligible students considered advanced coursework.
2.
Expanding access is as much about mindset as it is about policy. Shifting adult beliefs about who belongs in advanced coursework is essential for changing enrollment patterns.
3.
Relationship-based advising and targeted communication (especially from trusted adults) increase student participation in advanced coursework more effectively than broad announcements.
4.
Providing courses on high school campuses, eliminating fees, and embedding support systems within rigorous courses helps mitigate logistical and financial barriers to advanced course participation.