Some Very Bad Dropout Numbers

California has about 6.3 million school age children. Unfortunately, 1 in 5 of them will drop out of high school, and the numbers for African-American and Latino students is even worse:

The grim news, based on a relatively new, statewide data system that tracks individual students throughout their education careers, shows that in 2007-2008 only 68.1 percent of students graduated from high school. 20.1 percent, or 1 in 5, dropped out.

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For black students, the dropout rate is 34.7 percent. Latinos, who make up nearly half of California’s public school students, have a dropout rate of 25.5 percent. Statewide, white students have a 12.2 percent dropout rate, while Asians have an 8.4 percent rate. (SJ Merc 5/12/09)

There are a class of students between those 68 and 20 percent figures that otherwise go on to get their high school diplomas, but nonetheless in a changing economy, it is troubling to see 20% of California’s students not even completing high school.

It can be argued that we should be focusing on improving vocational education programs in the schools to satisfy students that have no interest in further education, but without a high school diploma, workers get a substantially lower income throughout life.

If you want to crunch your own numbers on our schools, check out the CA DoE’s DataQuest system.

2 thoughts on “Some Very Bad Dropout Numbers”

  1. I teach quality of life skills to older adults in convalescent hospitals – they are in locked wards due to mental impairments. Cigarette breaks are part of their curriculum, and most are smokers. I learned it’s a state law and part of their civil rights – as long as their MD gives written permission (e.g., no emphysema) and they pay for the cigs.  

  2. I wonder what percentage among these do what I did — drop out and go immediately to community college. Both of my brothers did the same, and I’ve had more than a few friends who did this.

    Not that lots of kids dropping out so they can get the heck out of a stifling high school isn’t an indictment of the school system, it’s just one coming from a bit of a different slant — the system fails from multiple angles, really. It’s just always a curiosity of mine when these reports come out.

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