Here's the summary of the New Statistical Brief: What Happened to Dropouts From the High School Class of 2004?
-Patricia
A little more than half receive a high school diploma or equivalent, but 90% never enroll in college or drop out after they do, according to the California Dropout Research Project.
By Mitchell Landsberg
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 12, 2008
For most high school dropouts, reality sets in sooner or later: Without a high school diploma, their prospects in life are limited at best.
A study released Thursday confirms that many California dropouts give school another try. But the California Dropout Research Project also reports that even dropouts who go back to school appear to stand little chance of success in college. And in an economy that increasingly prizes academic success, the outlook is bleak for those who don't return to school at all.
"Kids who drop out of school are at risk in general -- we know that," said Russell Rumberger, a professor at UC Santa Barbara who leads the dropout project.
But, he added, he was alarmed by the study's finding that one in three of the students who dropped out of 10th grade in 2004 were doing nothing four years later -- not going to school or working.
"That is a disturbing number for our state," Rumberger said.
The brief statistical study is the 39th report issued by the dropout project, which was formed in December 2006 for a limited operating period. Funded by four major philanthropic organizations, the project is intended to give educators and legislators the background they need to attack the state's serious dropout problem.
The new report, based on previously published national data, found that roughly one in five California students who dropped out of 10th grade in 2004 returned to school and earned their diploma within four years. A slightly smaller percentage earned a high school equivalency degree, or GED.
In all, 54% received some sort of high school degree or were still in school working toward that goal, the study showed.
But while roughly half of the dropouts were at least making a stab at finishing high school, few were progressing past that. Ninety percent had either never enrolled in college or had enrolled and dropped out. By contrast, 60% of their peers who didn't drop out of high school in their sophomore year were enrolled in college four years later.
"These data are foreboding," said Russlynn Ali, executive director of the Education Trust-West, an Oakland-based nonprofit that is an advocate for improving education, especially for disadvantaged youth. She said they suggest "a very bleak future for California."
The picture presented in the report of California dropouts looks quite similar to figures for the nation as a whole, with one significant exception: More than twice as many dropouts nationwide earned a GED certificate.
Rumberger said he couldn't explain that trend. He noted that many educators and economists believe that GED certificates are of limited value -- better than nothing, but less of a boost than a high school diploma.
Ali is among those who discount the GED. "I don't think those other states should be proud that they have more kids completing their GED than California," she said.
As the dropout project winds down over the next year, Rumberger said, the lesson it carries for policymakers is that the high school dropout problem is highly complex and will require a systemwide response, beginning as early as preschool.
Dropping out is "more of a process than an event . . . and there are a lot of telltale signs along the way," he said. The biggest signposts are failure in middle and high school, but the project's data suggest that the problems that lead students to drop out can begin as early as first grade.
On the plus side, he said, "It means there are a lot of places in a child's school career where we could intervene to help."
But it also means that there is no simple fix. "It really is going to take some systemic change," Rumberger said. "Anything short of that is not going to be that successful ultimately."
This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
Is anyone watching the National Education Summit live on http://www.aspeninstitute.org/site/c.huLWJeMRKpH/b.4442375/k.60E8/National_Education_Summit.htm
ReplyDelete??
It is very irritating to me (as a career educator) to see, once again, the latest "crisis" brought to us by the very government that has set up the system to ensure as many dropouts as possible.
ReplyDeleteWhen our government-controlled, one-size-fits-hardly-any public schools, in which all students are expected to succeed on the "every individual must be on the college prep (emphasis on the algebra!)" track, dropouts are guaranteed. College is not the only way to succeed in the-- buzzword warning-- global economy. Without a way to learn a trade, through courses that used to be taught as an option in high school, those who can't handle college prep are sitting around because they aren't allowed to learn how to make a living. Anyone who says college is necessary to make a good living obviously hasn't had to hire an electrician recently. I truly don't want to believe the theory that the middle class is deliberately being eradicted, but this manufactured dropout situation is certainly going to help ensure we have only the haves and the have-nots. And this is the land of opportunity? For whom?