Monday, April 28, 2014

US High-School Graduation Rate Hits 80%: All Time High

 I think the High School Graduation rate was about 50% to 60% when I graduated High school in 1966 and then went on to college. However, then the unemployment rate was likely about 2% to 5% which meant you could get a full time job and support 5 people at 16 or 17 being a carpenter or Garbage man at age 17 without a High School diploma then in the mid 1960s. This likely is not as true as then now. So, an 80% High School Graduation rate says more about how many jobs there are not than anything else. In other words if you even want ANY job at all you need high school and likely some college to get it or you have to create your own business.
    1. Wall Street Journal ‎- 3 hours ago
      The U.S. high-school graduation rate inched up to 80% in 2012, the highest rate ever recorded, though disparities remained among students of ...
    1. MyHighPlains‎ - 8 hours ago

    More news for high school graduation rate hits 80%


  1. U.S. High-School Graduation Rate Hits 80% - WSJ.com

    online.wsj.com/.../SB1000142405270230416360...
    The Wall Street Journal
    4 hours ago - The U.S. high-school graduation rate inched up to 80% in 2012, the highest rate ever recorded, according to federal data released Monday.
  2. High school graduation rate hits 80% | TuscaloosaNews.com

    www.tuscaloosanews.com/.../weather?...High-schoo...
    The Tuscaloosa News
    22 hours ago - WASHINGTON | U.S. public high schools have reached a milestone, an 80 percent graduation rate. Yet that still means 1 of every 5 students ...
  3. U.S. high school graduation rate hits 80% all-time high ...

    www.educationdive.com/...high-school-graduation-rate-hits-80...high/25...
    3 hours ago - U.S. high school graduation rate hits 80% all-time high ... The 2012 Averaged Freshman Graduation Rates from the U.S. Department of ...

    U.S. News

    U.S. High-School Graduation Rate Hits 80%

    Record High Comes as Disparities Remain Between Different Races

    Updated April 28, 2014 6:57 p.m. ET
    The U.S. high-school graduation rate inched up to 80% in 2012, the highest rate ever recorded, according to federal data released Monday.
    In 2011, the national high-school graduation rate was about 79%.
    Despite the progress, large gaps remain between the rate at which white and Asian students earn diplomas and the rate at which black and Hispanic students earn them, according to the data released by the Institute of Education Sciences, the research arm of the Department of Education.
    Education Secretary Arne Duncan praised the rise in graduation rates, saying it represents "enormous" impact for "students, their families and their communities." But he also warned that the nation still has a long way to go, noting that too many low-income and African-American boys drop out of school, and said dropouts face "poverty and misery."
    The nation's high-school graduation rate has, for the most part, been on a steady upward march during the past decade. But U.S. public schools have been under intense pressure to keep boosting the numbers in an effort to keep up with their international peers.
    Research has shown that high-school dropouts earn less money and are more likely to be unemployed than those who earn a diploma.
    The data released Monday reveal a slight jump from the previous year's graduation rate for every race. About 86% of white students made it through high school in four years in 2012, compared with about 69% of black students, 73% of Hispanics and 88% of Asians.
    Girls also bested boys. Nationally, about 85% of girls picked up a diploma, compared with 78% of boys.
    The data also reveal disparities among states. Iowa notched an 89% graduation rate, the highest, while the rate in Washington, D.C., the lowest, was 59%.
    Write to Stephanie Banchero at stephanie.banchero@wsj.com
    end quote from: 

    US High-School Graduation Rate Hits 80%

     

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