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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Maryland High School Graduation Rate Hits Record High

Across-the-Board Improvement Registered; Dropout Rate Falls

More Maryland students are receiving their high school diplomas than ever before, according to data released today by the Maryland State Department of Education.  As the graduation rate has hit record levels, the dropout rate has declined.
“Every student who graduates from high school moves a step closer to college, career, and a world of opportunities,” said State Superintendent of Schools Lillian M. Lowery.  “These results show that Maryland is headed in the right direction, but we also must continue work to close gaps in graduation rates that persist among students of different backgrounds.”
The four-year cohort graduation rate reached 86.39 percent in 2014 -- more than 4 percentage points better than the 81.97 percent rate registered in 2010.  The graduation rate jumped more than 1 percent over 2013, from 84.97 percent.  At the same time, dropout rates have fallen to new lows.
While gaps in graduation rates between student groups remain, the numbers improved across the board in 2014:
  • Four-year cohort graduation rates for American Indian, African American, Asian, Hispanic, and White students improved between 2013 and 2014, as did the rate for students identifying as two or more races.
  • The graduation rate for African American students has jumped from 76.09 in 2010 to 80.54 in 2014. 
  • The graduation rate for Hispanic students has improved nearly 6 percentage points, from 71.7 percent in 2010 to 77.5 percent in 2014,
  • Among students receiving special services, the four-year cohort graduation rate rose in two of three categories. The graduation rate for Special Education students, for example, improved more than 3 percentage points in one year, from 60.03 percent to 63.45 percent.
  • The graduation rate for students receiving free- or reduced price meals increased by nearly two percentage points, from 75.81 percent to 77.75 percent. 
  • The graduation rate for English Language Learners (ELL) dipped from 57.3 percent to 54.1 percent.  It should be noted that many ELL students spend an additional year in high school.  The five-year cohort graduation rate for ELL students in 2013--the most recent year with complete figures--stood at 67.48 percent.
Maryland five years ago moved to the cohort graduation rate, which follows a set group of students from freshman year through their senior year.  The four-year cohort graduation rate has improved every year since.  Simultaneously, the dropout rate has been in steady decline.  The State’s dropout rate, which stood at 11.93 percent in 2010, dropped to 8.35 percent in 2014.
The percentage of students dropping out of school also has declined across racial subgroups. The four-year cohort dropout rate for Hispanic students has declined from 18.65 percent in 2011 to 14.68 percent in 2014.  The dropout rate for African American students fell from 14.6 percent in 2011 to 10.57 percent in 2014.
The new high school and system data will be available on the updated MdReportCard.org website at noon today.

 

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Does anyone believe this???? I guess if you dumb down the requirements for graduation more will graduate

Claudia Balzac said...

"No child left behind" devolves to "Gotta pass "em all!"

Anonymous said...

Oh, they gradiated all write. Can read at a forthe grad level n all. lol

Anonymous said...

I believe it. If the teacher is not allowed to fail the student, what else would you expect?? The lack of correct language on the internet is a testament to the loss of standards. Most of the "graduates" can't make change for a dollar bill, or read beyond a 3rd grade level.

Anonymous said...

Yes and they cannot read, write, nor perfrom simple math. That's why we need free comm college!

Anonymous said...

Ask about Bridge Projects and how students are "guided" to complete them in order to graduate.

Anonymous said...

And the standards hit a record low

Anonymous said...

Not sure why a "project" done with lots of help is considered an ethical substitute for passing a class.

Anonymous said...

You would be dumbfounded if you really saw what was going on in getting these students to "graduate". Its usually to the detriment of most other students. When they still dont have the credits they suddenly get them by graduation day. I have seen this happen many times over. Year after year students walk who were not even close earlier in the year. Its pathetic.

Anonymous said...

2+2=4 Congratulations you passed.

Anonymous said...

I wonder who reports the data?? A lot of times the school system will find creative ways to withdraw students so it doesn't appear they dropped out. Sometimes students are sent away on "homeschooling" when they have actually dropped out. Some such as a WCBOE special education supervisor will boldly tell the child and families to quit. And these supervisors make $90k plus a year to say this? Great use of money Dr. Frederickson!