If the entire incoming freshman class did make it to senior year, there wouldnt have been any room or teachers to handle it.
Believe it or not, I live in one of the states with the highest graduation rates (82%) in the country - New Jersey. The district I live in has a 94% and the county overall has 97% rate. I guess we're lucky in that respect but we also pay some of the highest property tax rates in the country - I guess that's the trade-off! I'd like to see how those rates change in the next couple of years after all the education cuts that are to take effect this upcoming school year.
I know the rates since I've been on school principal/superintendent search committee.
Believe it or not, I live in one of the states with the highest graduation rates (82%) in the country - New Jersey. The district I live in has a 94% and the county overall has 97% rate. I guess we're lucky in that respect but we also pay some of the highest property tax rates in the country - I guess that's the trade-off! I'd like to see how those rates change in the next couple of years after all the education cuts that are to take effect this upcoming school year.
I know the rates since I've been on school principal/superintendent search committee.
Ok so thats 78% of incoming freshman graduated.
How does it count people that moved in or out of the system during those 4 years?
Even without the question above you have to remember that number counts any students that dropped out before graduation as well as those that actually failed out.
I would say it would be about right for a school that was actually letting kids fail if they should (my school had a tendency to do things like let students make up work they missed all year to get them to graduate etc if they were going to fail even though 99% of the time that worked missed was because they just didn't do their homework). I would think my high school numbers would have been like that espeically if anyone that failed our MCAS tests and thus weren't getting a full high school diploma didn't count as graduating either.
Believe it or not, I live in one of the states with the highest graduation rates (82%) in the country - New Jersey. The district I live in has a 94% and the county overall has 97% rate. I guess we're lucky in that respect but we also pay some of the highest property tax rates in the country - I guess that's the trade-off! I'd like to see how those rates change in the next couple of years after all the education cuts that are to take effect this upcoming school year.
I know the rates since I've been on school principal/superintendent search committee.
Texas claims a 96% overall graduation rate. The problem with all of these claims is that there isn't a good standard for how to measure graduation rates.
Ours is 97%, but the state average is quite a bit lower. I don't think the way records are kept here makes for an accurate reporting, though, because it is strictly a comparison between the number of students in the class of whatever year as incoming freshmen and the number of students who graduate in that year. So districts that are losing population or losing students to magnets/schools of choice have artifically low graduation rates.