You have to keep in mind that statistics can be misleading.
Here's an example that makes me a little mad: My daughter has a good friend who's an excellent student, always made excellent grades, was involved in school activities, etc. Her parents both had medical-something jobs at the hospital, and she has plans to do something similar. Her older sister is in college, and she's definitely going to college.
Now, here's where my story really begins: Her dad got a new job somewhere up North, and they moved away. According to statistics, SHE IS NOW A HIGH SCHOOL DROP OUT.
Yes, our school is forced to count this girl -- an outstanding student -- as one of our yearly drop outs. No matter that she is now enrolled in a new school up north and will absolutely graduate on time from that school. She is a drop out, a black mark against our school, a negative mark on our school's reputation. That's beyond unfair -- it's a lie!
Think about how many teenagers move back and forth between mom's house and dad's house at some point in their high school career. If they change schools in the process, statistically they become drop outs.
Similarly, a kid who falls behind academically -- let's say a girl who has a baby her junior year and fails several classes, but then gets back on track and graduates a year late -- is counted as a drop out!
So don't take that 65% of all American kids gradaute from high school statistic all that seriously.
NC is now changing this. If a school system can verify where the student moved to and whether that student graduated, they can be excluded as a drop-out. They are also looking at a 5 year cohort group as opposed to the standard 4. Provides some assistance, but still isn't a true test of graduation rates.
I agree that unless societal changes occur where education is truly valued, the educational system will continue as it is.