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Why Students Drop Out
Even though school completion rates have continually grown during much of past 100 years, dropping out of school persists as a problem that interferes with educational system efficiency and the most straightforward and satisfying route to individual educational goals for young people. Doll, Eslami, and Walters (2013) present data from seven nationally representative studies (spanning more than 50 years) regarding reasons students drop out of high school. Some excerpts are presented below in tables; however, for a complete discussion, please see the original article: “Understanding Why Students Drop Out of High School, According to Their Own Reports”
The selected tables are presented in opposite order than they appear in the article so as to present the most recent data first. Note also that survey questions varied from study to study (database to database) so caution should be taken in making comparisons across years and studies.
Included in the tables presented is an analysis of whether the reasons presented are considered “push,” “pull,” or “falling out” factors. The following briefly presents an explanation from Doll et al. (2013).
Jordan et al. (1994) explained pressures on students of push and pull dropout factors. A student is pushed out when adverse situations within the school environment lead to consequences, ultimately resulting in dropout. . . . [S]tudents can be pulled out when factors inside the student divert them from completing school. . . . Watt and Roessingh (1994) added a third factor called falling out of school, which occurs when a student does not show significant academic progress in schoolwork and becomes apathetic or even disillusioned with school completion. It is not necessarily an active decision, but rather a “side-effect of insufficient personal and educational support” (p. 293).
Educational Longitudinal Study (2002) Ranked Reasons for Dropout in 2006 by Student Dropouts.
Type
Rank
Cause of Dropout
Overall Frequency Percentage
Males
Females
Overall
Pushed out—10 factors
48.7
53.1
47.1
Pulled out—8 factors
36.9
30.4
40.0
Falling out—3 factors
14.3
16.5
12.9
Total
100.0
100.0
100.0
School-related reasons:
Push
1
Missed too many school days
43.5
44.1
42.7
Pull
2
Thought it would be easier to get GED
40.5
41.5
39.1
Push
3
Was getting poor grades/failing school
38.0
40.1
35.2
Fall
4
Did not like school
36.6
40.1
32.0
Push
5
Could not keep up with schoolwork
32.1
29.7
35.3
Push
8
Thought could not complete course requirements
25.6
22.9
39.0
Push
9
Could not get along with teachers
25.0
27.7
21.6
Fall
12
Did not feel belonged there
19.9
19.9
19.9
Push
13
Could not get along with others
18.7
17.7
20.1
Push
14
Was suspended
16.9
22.9
9.0
Fall
17
Changed schools and did not like new one
11.2
14.5
7.0
Push
18
Thought would fail competency test
10.5
9.0
12.3
Push
19
Did not feel safe
10.0
10.5
9.5
Push
20
Was expelled
9.9
15.2
3.0!
Family-related reasons:
Pull
6
Was Pregnant
27.8
—
27.8
Pull
11
Had to support family
20.0
17.6
23.0
Pull
15
To care for a member of the family
15.5
15.2
16.0
Pull
16
Became a father/mother of a baby
14.4
6.2
25.0
Pull
21
Married or planned to get married
6.8
3.0
11.6
Employment-related reasons:
Pull
7
Got a job
27.8
33.5
20.3
Pull
10
Could not work at same time
21.7
23.1
19.9
663
375
288
Source. Dalton, Glennie, Ingels, and Wirt (2009, p.22); Dropout Indicator 29.
Featured Resources
Doll, J. J., Eslami, Z., & Walters, L. (2013). Understanding Why Students Drop Out of High School, According to Their Own
An active player committed for almost 150 years in France, Apprentis d'Auteuil builds, with its international partners, support, educational, training and insertion programs. These actions enable 50,000 vulnerable young people and families worldwide to regain confidence and find their place in society every year.
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What we do > Training and insertion
Training and insertion
Apprentis d’Auteuil and its partners put in place support, social and professional measures adapted to the difficulties faced by youth and to business needs.
Throughout the world, 69 million school-age youth or those who could be trained are excluded from the school system.
In Europe, "Eurofound" has identified five million young people who are qualified as "Neet*" – their number has progressed by 35% since 2009. In France, different studies converge to tally 150,000 youth who each year leave the school system without a qualification.
In terms of employment, 25% of those in the 16-25 age group are faced with long-term unemployment and this number reaches 47% of the unemployed for youth aged 16-25 who have not obtained a diploma. Paradoxically many sectors regret the difficulties in recruitment including those with basic qualifications. The situation is the same, even more intense, in European countries and alarming in many other countries.
These "unqualified" youth are not incompetent, but they cannot find the resources and tools they need on their own to enter the job market.
Learning a job skill is not always enough for insertion. The young people need to acquire certain social skills and learn to manage their life on a daily basis. Personalized support is needed.
Based on our experience in France, in the reception, education, and training of young people in difficult situations and with our international partners, Apprentis d’Auteuil have put in place, support, social and professional measures (taking action after a period of discouragement, intermediation toward employment, training, social entrepreneurship/companies…) adapted to the difficulties faced by youth and to business needs.
We also continue to share and experiment new and innovative solutions. In addition to job skills training, we also work on the interpersonal skills needed to work in a company as well as building autonomy and strengthening the proficiency of our support skills with an eye to professional insertion.
*Neet: Youth without a job, education or training.
**Intermediation toward employment: This is about actively guiding young people in their approach to businesses. The guide identifies potential employers, job opportunities and the skills needed. Subsequently, the alignment between job skills and employers needs facilitates recruitment. The guide then conducts a regular follow-up until the person is totally integrated in their new job.
Focus on...
The Democratic Republic of the Congo: has set up a training and employment support platform.
For 15 years, we have accompanied the REEJER (collaborative structure of Kinshasa united training centres). During these 15 years, working together we have set up many training centres, which today train more than 3000 youth each year.
The Apprentis d'Auteuil/REEJER alliance is developing local training centres aimed at giving youth the bedrock of skills needed to be recruited by international businesses based in Congo DRC. Based on the knowledge of the territorial context of its Congolese partners, Apprentis d’Auteuil is building with them a project in three steps:
provides the professionals from the ten training centres with the methodologies of skills validation,
develops learning content in relation with company requirements,
intergrates locally the intermediation** methodologies toward employment.
**Intermediation toward employment: This is about actively guiding young people in their approach to businesses. The guide identifies potential employers, job opportunities and the skills needed. Subsequently, the alignment between job skills and employers needs facilitates recruitment. The guide then conducts a regular follow-up until the person is totally integrated in their new job.
Morocco: creation of a multi-job training centre
Since 2012, the association Al Karam has been organizing two training courses adapted to a public in great instability in order to allow this youth to learn an evolving trade in the Safi employment basin: catering, service, hairdressing/beauty industry and horticulture.
Each year, 80 unemployed young people aged between 15 and 30 are admitted to the training centre.
Likewise, three instructors in catering and services, horticulture, hairdressing and beauty benefit from exchanges with the team from Apprentis d’Auteuil.
This centre in Safi, has also created an innovating training centre model in Morocco integrating professional practices in real-life contexts: training restaurants, hairdressing or beauty salons.
France – Morocco – USA: Intermediation platform toward employment
Based on the analysis that youth have many intrinsic skills that they are not aware of, this platform offers them the possibility, via group workshops, to identify their strong points and pinpoint areas which need strengthening.
Secondly, the young people complete basic skills training (reading, writing, counting and even a foreign language) and design their project (further education or employment).
Finally, they are helped in their job search and in their job placement, or enrolled in further education.
This platform illustrates the benefits of cooperation, mixing an American mobilization tool called "life skills," Apprentis d’Auteuil’s expertise "education and the organisation of a personalised process" and the ability to welcome street children from our Moroccan partner.
France: plan "Succeed Vendée"
In Vendée, a group of small and medium size companies and large groups have rallied with Apprentis d’Auteuil to create an assistance to insertion service for young people between the ages of 16-18.
This service enables youth to discover different occupations during short-term training. According to their needs, they will be offered remedial classes and work on particular difficult areas for them: family relationships, managing interpersonal problems, accommodation issues…
At the end of this first step, they are accompanied with their professional project until they have long-term employment. The originality of this measure, closely linked to a network of committed businesses, is to guarantee to young people global, professional and social support.
France – South-East region, United Kingdom, Germany, Italy: creation of a business incubator for young entrepreneurs.
It is within the European framework and with the support of the ESF (European Social Fund) that this project has been developed.
It aims to offer global support to young people who wish to create their activity: from the beginnings of the project to the implementation to the development over the first few years (riskier period for young creators).
Organized in four key steps, relying on the expertise of recognized national players:
Translation of the project idea: supporting the young candidate in the project’s creation and a complete review of the project. This step is carried out in partnership with the ADIE***
Construction of the project: this part is based on a methodology developed together by different people enabling the various components of the creation to become accessible
Financial startup: Apprentis d'Auteuil’s expertise joins with the microcredit measures developed by the ADIE***.
Development within the business incubator: assemble on the site young creators who can benefit from long-term support, which in addition to sharing resources, gives them the possibility to avoid the pitfalls faced by newly established businesses.
***ADIE: Agency for the development of Economic Initiative. ADIE has been the main entrepreneurial microfinance association dedicated to young creators for more than ten years.
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3 Reasons Students Dropout of High School
Submitted by Christopher on Sat, 03/09/2013 - 6:44pm
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Why does Stanislaus County have a high school dropout rate of 25 percent?
United Way Worldwide’s call to action we blogged about earlier this week prompted United Way of Stanislaus County to further research the issue of high school dropout. We found that dropping out of school is a process, and does not occur overnight. The process often starts prior to a child entering into the school system. Poor academic achievement as early as elementary school is predicator of dropping out of school.
There are many factors that put a student at risk to dropping out of school. Many times not all risk factors apply to all students. However, research has consistently indicated the following risk factors as variables that lead to a student dropping out of school:
Lack of parent engagement
Poor academic performance
Work/Family economic needs
Lack of a supportive adult
Disconnect between school academics and work
Not enough individualized attention
Low student engagement
Based on our research, there appeared to be three main reasons students dropout of high school in Stanislaus County:
1. Parent Engagement was most often reported as a necessary factor for a child to be successful in school. Research stated educational support (both financial and emotional) from parents is key to a child being successful and staying in school. If parents do not hold high aspirations for their child’s educational attainment, their child will not see the purpose of staying in or doing well in school.
If parents are engaged early in the child’s educational career the child is more likely to be successful in school. The parent’s interest and investment in their child’s education shows the child that education is important. This consequently increases the child’s likelihood of having good academic performance.
2. Academic Performance is another key factor that was consistently cited as a factor that influences a student staying in school and graduating. Several research articles cited that the road to academic success starts early in the education system. Both school readiness and 3rd grade reading proficiency have been cited as indicators of future academic success. After the 3rd grade children are no longer learning to read, but are now reading to learn. Helping struggling students in the 3rd grade to read at or above reading proficiency will help be more prepared for success in the future.
Research has also indicated that success in middle school is a key indicator of whether a student will drop out of high school. In middle school, a student is bombarded with many social changes that affect success in school. The transition from elementary school, where children are primarily in one class with the same classmates and teacher, to middle school, where students are rotating classes, teachers and classmates, is a difficult transition for some students. The relationship with their teachers isn’t as strong, due to the fact that they have multiple subjects. This makes it difficult for students to get the attention they need. Research has indicated that success in middle school is a strong indicator for success in high school.
3. Family Economic Needs also arose in research as a contributing factor to school dropout. For example, Russell Rumberger and Sun Ah Lim authors of the study Why Students Drop Out of School: A Review of 25 Years of Research (2008), found that students from a lower socioeconomic status were more likely to drop out of school than a student from a higher socioeconomic status. Russell Rumberger and Sun Ah Lim’s study also found that students who work more than 20 hours a week are more at risk to drop out.
In July 2012 United Way of Stanislaus County made an informed decision align with United Way Worldwide’s Education Focus Area. In support of United Way Worldwide’s goal to decrease the national dropout rate, United Way of Stanislaus County adopted the goal of increasing the graduation rate in Stanislaus County.
Over 20 stakeholders gathered in October 2012 for the first Education Initiative Collaborative meeting, during which we announced our plan to develop and launch an initiative that will help reach our goal by July 2013. In order to determine our community need and gather data outlining the relevance of this objective, our first step was to talk to students in our community to determine what they need to be more successful in school. As a champion of positive change in our community, we need to determine what educational issues were, from the perspective of those on the “front lines” in our community. Eight focus groups were held. We spoke with students, parents, young adults who have dropped out of school, teachers, community experts and stakeholders to identify the main barriers to success; over 50 individuals were spoken and listened to.
We are looking for community support to fund our Education Initiative. If you would like to help us increase the high school graduation rate in Stanislaus County, please make a tax-deductable donation to support our work. You can donate here with a credit card, or send a check to 422 McHenry Avenue, Modesto, CA 95354.
Question: In addition to the information we've shared in this post, what other reasons do students dropout of high school?
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11 Facts About Dropping Out
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More than 1.3 million students drop out of high school every year in the US.
More than 20% of dropouts are foreign born. Another 17% are Hispanic students.
A high-school dropout is ineligible for 90% of jobs in America.
Kids who don't read proficiently by 4th grade are 4 times likelier to drop out of school. Reading books (for pleasure, not school) improves literacy rates and prevents dropouts. Start a banned book club with your friends to improve reading and literacy skills and, you know, because it’s badass. Sign up for Banned Books Club.
16- to 24-year-old boys made up nearly 60% of dropouts in 2010. That’s more than 1.8 million students.
In 2009, the Northeast had a lower status dropout rate (7.1%) than the South and the West (8.4% and 8.6%, respectively)
After World War II, the United States had the #1 high school graduation rate in the world. Today, we have dropped to #22 among 27 industrialized nations.
The percentage of students enrolling in college in the fall immediately following high school completion was 68.2% in 2011. Females enrolled at a higher rate (72.2%) than males (64.7%).
Roughly 80% of white and Asian students complete high school, compared to 55% African-American and Hispanic students.
A high-school graduate’s lifetime income is 50 to 100% higher than a non-graduate’s.
In 2012, only 21 states in the US required students to attend high school until they are 18 or earn a diploma.
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What Are Problems That Cause Students to Drop Out of School?
Education by Demand Media
by Kristine Tucker, Demand Media
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Teen pregnancy affects high school dropout rates.
Related Articles
What Are the Effects of High School Students Not Finishing High School?
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Effects of Dropping Out of College on Students
Social Problems Affecting Students & Schools
High school students and college students drop out of school for many reasons, but a few core problems can be the catalyst behind their decision. Students who don't complete high school are usually eligible to take GED tests. According to Georgetown University's "The College Payoff," high school dropouts have average lifetime earnings of $973,000, high school graduates $1.3 million and college graduates with bachelor's degrees around $2.3 million. Dropping out is a personal decision, but many students feel like it's the best option if they have personal or academic problems that make school attendance a burdensome responsibility.
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Pregnancy and Parenthood
Teen pregnancy can pose concerns for students trying to complete high school academic requirements. Nearly one-third of teen girls who drop out of high school state early pregnancy and parenthood as keys reason for their decision, according to TheNationalCampaign.org. Pregnant teens may feel embarrassed about going back to school, struggle with morning sickness or fatigue, and have difficulty keeping up with their classwork. Taking care of a baby is time-consuming, so many may not have the energy to complete high school. Pregnancy also affects college students, but with the availability of online courses and the maturity that comes with adulthood, college-age women often have the opportunity to complete college coursework.
Boredom
Students often drop out of high school and college due to apathy or boredom. High school students often report that academic content isn't interesting and they don't have a personal connection with their teachers, according to an article in "Psychology Today." High school dropouts and college students may have other alternatives that seem more appealing, such as getting a job or starting a career. High school students who aren't interested in going to college may not see the value of a high school education. Boredom is a problem that must be addressed by students, parents, school faculty and education boards to see if better course offerings and more student-teacher interactions would help.
Academic Struggles
High school and college students often drop out because they struggle academically and don't think they'll have the GPA or credits necessary to graduate. Some high school students don't want to risk failing, which could mean summer school or another year of high school. College students' academic problems often lead to a loss of scholarships or grants and may result in having to repeat classes to earn needed credits.
Lack of Parental Support
The lack of parental involvement is a problem that often leads to higher dropout rates, especially with high school students. Parents play an important role when it comes to high school attendance. High school dropouts often have parents who weren't engaged or concerned with their academic success. If a parent doesn't encourage her child to stay in school, show interest in classes and teachers, communicate with administration, or pay attention to homework assignments, the child might not see any reason to follow through with the coursework. When parents don't prioritize their child's high school education, the child may choose to drop out, according to an article on the United Way website.
Money
Some high school students and college students drop out because they want to work to earn money. They may need money to finance a car, pay for auto insurance, buy clothes or electronics, pay for housing or support unhealthy addictions. Most high school and college students don't have the time and energy to go to school all day, complete homework assignments and still work enough hours to support lofty expenses. Dropouts who are concerned about their immediate, short-term financial situation may see a full-time job as the best way to maintain the lifestyle they desire.
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References
United Way of Stanislaus County: 3 Reasons Students Drop Out of High School
Psychology Today: Inoculate Against Boredom
The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy: Teen Pregnancy and High School Dropout: What Communities are Doing to Address These Issues
The Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce: The College Payoff
About the Author
As curriculum developer and educator, Kristine Tucker has enjoyed the plethora of English assignments she's read (and graded!) over the years. Her experiences as vice-president of an energy consulting firm have given her the opportunity to explore business writing and HR. Tucker has a BA and holds Ohio teaching credentials.
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BananaStock/BananaStock/Getty Images
Journal Issue: America's High Schools Volume 19 Number 1 Spring 2009
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Finishing High School: Alternative Pathways and Dropout Recovery
Authors: John H. Tyler Magnus Lofstrom
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Introduction
By most measures, the nation's high schools did a remarkable job of educating the populace throughout the twentieth century. At least in part because of the secondary education they received in American public high schools, hundreds of millions of U.S. citizens have been able and ready to participate in a dynamic democracy and to contribute to and benefit from an ever-changing economy. Many have used public high schools to help them transition from first-generation immigrant to American citizen. To be sure, the opportunities and the rewards have been uneven, varying by gender, race, and geographic region, but if the twentieth century was, as Claudia Goldin has argued, "the human capital century," with America as leader, then the American public high school system deserves due credit.1
Even so, in the final decades of the twentieth century, public education, including public secondary education, increasingly became the focus of criticism and controversy because of failures perceived or real.2 And criticism directed at the nation's schools has not abated in this new century. A recent focus of widespread concern has been the number of students, particularly black and Hispanic students, who never graduate from high school. One high-profile national dropout study, for example, begins ominously, "There is a high school dropout epidemic in America."3 And the popular press gave widespread and front-page coverage to a Johns Hopkins University study that coined the term "dropout factory" to describe certain high schools and estimated that the nation has 1,700 such schools.
Whether termed a "problem," a "crisis," or an "epidemic," the large numbers of students who do not graduate from high school generate clear and widespread concern. To bring some additional light and clarity to the topic, we examine different facets of the dropout issue. We begin with two questions. Just how bad is the dropout "problem"? And who, exactly, is dropping out? We then turn to the costs associated with leaving school early. We conclude by examining the state of knowledge regarding dropout-prevention and "second-chance" programs.
Contents
Summary
Introduction
Dropout Rates: The Magnitude of the Problem and Measurement Issues
Who Drops Out - and Why?
Costs of Dropping Out
Dropout Prevention
Second-Chance Programs
Conclusion
Endnotes
Figures & Tables
Figure 1
Table 1
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Dropout Rates: The Magnitude of the Problem and Measurement Issues
Given the importance of graduation rates as a performance metric of the nation's high schools, one might assume the existence of well-defined, well-agreed-upon measures of that performance. One would be wrong. Although each state and the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) all produce graduation and dropout statistics based on "standard measures," recent heated debates over the "true" rates underscore a general unease about how accurately and consistently officials are able to document school performance when it comes to graduating students.
The NCES provides the nation's most commonly cited dropout and school completion statistics. Using primarily two data sources, the Current Population Survey (CPS) and the Common Core of Data (CCD), the NCES provides four different statistics: event dropout rate, status dropout rate, status completion rate, and averaged freshman graduation rate. Table 1 defines these measures, along with the respective data sources. Figure 1 shows the trends in these four statistics from 1972 to 2005.
Based on figure 1, one might conclude that in terms of historical trends, schools are doing relatively well at moving students to graduation. School attainment appears generally to be on the rise—dropout event and status dropout rates are decreasing and school completion rates are steady (averaged freshman graduation rate) or rising slightly (status completion rate). In 2005, a relatively small share, 3.8 percent, of students dropped out of grades ten through twelve, and almost nine in ten (87.6 percent) of the country's eighteen- to twenty-four-year-olds held a high school credential. But conclusions based on these government statistics are controversial. Some observers feel that these measures paint too positive a picture of what some call a dropout "crisis," while those on the other side of the debate suggest that the government figures are at least close to the mark and that the "crisis" label is yet another undeserved black mark on the nation's schools. Driving the debate are questions about what data are used to calculate the relevant statistics and who is considered a "graduate."
Data issues primarily focus on the fact that three of the four widely used national measures—the status completion rate, the status dropout rate, and the event dropout rate—use the CPS. The CPS is a monthly survey of about 50,000 households conducted by the Bureau of the Census for the Bureau of Labor Statistics and is a primary source of information on the labor force characteristics of the U.S. population. But the CPS has some recognized deficiencies as a basis for calculating dropout and graduation statistics.
The more important issue, however, is which individuals are considered to be high school graduates. In particular, it matters substantially whether the data count individuals who leave school and later earn a General Educational Development (GED) credential as high school graduates or as dropouts. In terms of official NCES statistics, people who hold GEDs are not counted as graduates in the calculation of graduation rates, such as the averaged freshman graduation rates, but they are treated as completers in the status completion rate.4
The distinction between having a traditional high school diploma or a GED credential would be less important if the two differently credentialed groups had equally favorable outcomes in the labor market and higher education. But in terms of labor market outcomes such as wages and employment, GED holders fare consistently worse than do regular high school graduates, and GED holders also get less postsecondary education than do regular high school graduates.5 Given that dropouts who hold a GED are not the equivalent of high school graduates on two such important outcomes, it seems problematic to treat GED holders as "graduates" in official educational attainment statistics.6 Indeed, the adequate yearly progress requirements of the 2001 No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) state that only students who receive a traditional diploma should be counted as high school graduates. Furthermore, although the GED program may be beneficial to some dropouts, it may have unintended consequences. Several studies, for example, find that the GED program may induce some students to drop out.7
Not surprisingly, there are competing views about the GED credential as a marker of successful high school "completion." For example, some states and local school districts count GED recipients as high school "completers" when computing their own administrative graduation statistics, while others stake out compromises between the two polar positions. In January of 2008, the state board of education in Virginia entertained a proposal to establish a school-level "Graduation and Completion Index" that would give regular high school graduates a weight of 1.0 and GED recipients a weight of 0.75. Satisfactory scores on this index by each school would then be a part of the state's accreditation process.8
Policies of the GED Testing Service (GEDTS) seem to establish a clear boundary between enrolled students pursuing a high school diploma and dropouts who pursue the GED credential. GEDTS policy states that the GED tests may be administered only to people who are "at least 16 years of age and not currently enrolled in an accredited high school...."9 There are, however, exceptions to the requirement that a candidate for the GED credential must be a school dropout.
In response to requests from state departments of education, the GEDTS has authorized in-school "GED Option" programs whereby some students may remain enrolled in their regular high school as they pursue a GED. Twelve states now have GEDTS authorization to offer GED Option programs to students who meet certain criteria, including credit deficiency, that place them at risk of dropping out.10 (Before 2002, a few states operated in-school programs that used the GED tests without the authorization of the GEDTS, but they no longer do so.) The ostensible purpose of these in-school GED programs, whether sanctioned or not, is to keep potential dropouts enrolled and involved in high school. Thus, even though the GED program was designed as a second-chance option for school dropouts, it has a secondary focus on dropout "prevention."11
Schools have strong incentives to participate in the GED Option program, because it allows them to continue to receive average daily attendance funds for participating students, funds they would lose were the students to drop out and leave the school rolls. A close inspection shows a lack of consistency nationwide in how GED Option students are treated in calculating graduation statistics. Some states may award students who successfully complete the GED Option program a regular high school diploma and count them as high school graduates; others count them as "completers" but not as "graduates" in calculating graduation statistics.12 No good national data on the size of the GED Option program exist, but a 2007 document from the Mississippi Department of Education concludes that if the state were to count GED Option students as high school graduates, the state graduation rate would rise from 61.1 percent to 62.9 percent.13
Comparing the NCES status completion rate, which treats GED holders as completers, with the NCES freshman graduation rate, which does not count GED holders as graduates, makes clear the importance of this issue. In 2005, the NCES status completion rate was 87.6 percent, 13 percentage points higher than the freshman graduation rate of 74.6 percent. The GED is not the only reason for the discrepancy but it may plausibly be the most important. This view is consistent with the work of James Heckman and Paul LaFontaine, who report that graduation rates estimated using data from the October CPS—the data used by NCES to generate the status completion rate—are upwardly biased by 7 to 8 percentage points because they count GED holders as high school graduates. Heckman and LaFontaine conclude that this is the most important source for overstated U.S. graduation rates.14
The GED, however, is not the only source of bias in the measures of school attrition and completion. Heckman and LaFontaine report that sample coverage (that is, inclusion or exclusion) of people who are incarcerated, people in the armed forces, and immigrants also creates a bias in secondary educational attainment measures.15 These coverage issues affect both trends and differences across groups.
Heckman and LaFontaine also find that official statistics that show white and minority graduation rates converging over time are inaccurate, particularly so for males. They note that young black and Hispanic men have been incarcerated at increasingly higher rates than young whites. Such men are not counted in the CPS-based status completion rates because the CPS sample excludes people who are incarcerated. In addition, blacks in particular have been earning GEDs at higher rates in recent years than have whites. Heckman and LaFontaine contend that white-black differences in graduation rates are roughly the same as they were thirty years ago, about a 15-percentage-point difference favoring whites.
Finally, Heckman and LaFontaine show that when comparable measures are used on comparable samples, a consensus of the graduation rate can be reached across data that have been used by various researchers—for example, the Current Population Survey, the Common Core of Data, the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988, High School and Beyond, and the National Survey of Youth.16
The work by Heckman and LaFontaine helps to reconcile the competing dropout and graduation rate figures computed by researchers such as Jay Greene, Christopher Swanson, and Lawrence Mishel and Joydeep Roy.17 On balance, the Heckman and LaFontaine estimates suggest that today's overall graduation rates are in the 75 to 78 percent range, with white rates at 84 percent, Hispanic rates at 72 percent, and black rates at about 65 percent. These figures tend to be lower than both official government figures and those put forth by Mishel and Roy. Heckman and LaFontaine's overall graduation rate estimates are higher than the roughly 67 percent rate suggested by Greene, and their minority graduation rates are not as dire as Greene's 50 percent rate.
The apparent confusion and resulting debates over how well U.S. schools are graduating students leads one to consider what kind of data set might be a "gold standard." One possibility would be a national student ID system that would follow students no matter where they were enrolled. Thus, a student who left a school or a district or a state but re-enrolled in another school would remain in the system until graduation or until he or she otherwise left the system. But even an effective national student ID system would not reveal that some ninth graders had dropped out and left the system until they failed to show up as graduates with their age cohort. Of course, the missing graduates could not be counted as "dropouts" without giving them an extra year or two to graduate in case they had been held back a grade in high school or had decided to return to school. The problem is that even with a very good, individual student ID data system, a dropout becomes a dropout when he or she leaves school and the school-leaving often happens without the kind of consultation that would allow for accurate data coding as to dropout status.
If schools are to do a better job at having up-to-date information on dropout and graduation rates, they must have more accurate and more appropriate data. And although the Heckman and LaFontaine effort may go a long way in quelling the "dropout debates," it provides no information that a state, school district, or school can use to inform practice and policy. Most researchers who have explored this topic agree that the starting point for quality data is with a student-level ID that would allow states to follow students across schools and districts at least within states and over time.
One national effort to promote consistent state information on student performance is the Data Quality Campaign, which provides guidelines for what constitutes "good graduation and dropout data."18 But even when acceptable data systems are in place, the question remains how administrative units at the state, district, and school level will use those data in their reporting. For example, how will these units count GEDs when the incentives from virtually all sources are to have graduation rates that are as high as possible? New Jersey might provide some insight on this question. Heckman and LaFontaine report that in New Jersey, an individual need only mail in GED test scores that meet the state GED score requirements to qualify for a state-endorsed high school diploma. These newly credentialed individuals are then included in the official state diploma counts. The critical issue here, as Christopher Swanson and Duncan Chaplin have pointed out, is that under the federal system it is states, not the federal government, that have final authority in determining requirements for a high school diploma.19 Thus, agreement across states on what represents high school completion may be as important as data development and consistency when it comes to developing "well-defined and well-agreed-upon" measures of schools' performance in graduating students. The U.S. Department of Education recently recognized the need for action and tightened the NCLB regulations regarding how states calculate high school graduation rates.
We close this section by suggesting the need to consider current graduation rates in the context of historical trends of this measure and the need to consider both trends and current rates in the context of the current global economy. Our interpretation of the research at hand is that graduation rates have certainly not been increasingly steadily since 1960, as table 1 would suggest. Neither have they been in a steady decline. Rather, the evidence from Heckman and LaFontaine suggests a 2- to 3-percentage-point fluctuation around a relatively flat forty-year trend line centered at about 77 percent. Thus, schools are apparently doing about as well now as they were forty years ago in terms of graduating students. The problem is that just as the competitive pressures associated with an increasingly global economy have increased, the importance of education in determining personal and national well-being has also grown. "Steady as she goes," then, is an alarming rather than comforting reality when it comes to how well the nation is getting students successfully through high school.
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Who Drops Out - and Why?
Even the most optimistic assessments of national dropout rates suggest that far too many students are leaving school early. Economic, societal, and equity considerations all point to the need for interventions that could cause some of the roughly one million students who leave school each year to make a different decision. The importance of reducing the number of school dropouts is also reflected in NCLB, which requires states to incorporate graduation rates in their accountability systems for schools and school districts.
A first step in thinking systematically about how to affect dropout decisions is to have a good understanding of the characteristics and lives of students most at risk of leaving school early. That is, who are the students who tend to drop out, and what causes them to leave school? Although researchers know quite a bit about the characteristics of students who leave school, we know much less about the causal factors that lead to the school-leaving decision.
The great bulk of the research on why students leave school comes from post-dropout surveys and interviews of students who have left school. A recent example is "The Silent Epidemic," a study of dropouts supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that interviewed 467 sixteen- to twenty-four-year-old dropouts across the nation.20 Other research relies on student responses to questions posed in data sets such as the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988.21 Not surprisingly, students report a variety of reasons for leaving school early, and studies consistently find that a complex set of relationships between student, family, school, and community factors are linked with the dropout decision. Importantly, a substantial body of research suggests that the decision to drop out is often not made suddenly as the result of recent and potentially temporary factors, but rather is part of a longer process of disengagement from school.22
Although interesting, the reasons dropouts offer to explain why they leave school do not necessarily reveal the true underlying causes, and hence do not positively identify specific factors that school officials and policymakers can address. But effectively and efficiently addressing the dropout problem clearly requires knowing these underlying causal factors.
Students regularly report, for example, some measure of school disengagement as the primary reason for leaving school.23 The commonality of these responses ("did not like school" and "classes were not interesting") is often cited as a reason that schools must become more "relevant" and that teachers must learn to structure curriculum and pedagogy so that it is more "interesting" and "engaging" to students at risk of dropping out. Both suggestions may be completely on the mark and, if enacted on a wide scale, might reduce dropout rates.
But if the causal arrow in the above responses ran the other way, the types of school reform being urged would have a much smaller than anticipated effect on dropout rates. That is, if other nonschool factors cause a student to lose interest in school and drop out, then focusing on school disengagement and ignoring the underlying factors that cause the school disengagement might do little to change the dropout decision. Of course, the goal is to uncover the underlying causes, and it is not clear how well research has done in that realm. As a result, information on the "causes" of dropping out generally rests on a combination of the observable characteristics, behaviors, and outcomes of dropouts, along with their self-reported reasons for leaving school.
Student Characteristics
Student characteristics associated with a higher probability of dropping out, often called student "risk factors," are both numerous and oft-cited as dropout "predictors." Not surprisingly, poor school performance is a strong predictor of dropping out of school. For example, low test scores, course failure, and grade retention have all been found to be strongly associated with leaving school.24 As noted, weak student engagement, often measured by absenteeism and discipline problems in survey data, is also strongly linked with a higher dropout probability.25
Early adult responsibilities have also been linked with a lower likelihood of graduation. One such responsibility is becoming a parent. Although teen parents are more likely than their peers who are not parents to drop out of school, research does not provide a clear picture of whether childbearing has a causal impact on the probability of quitting school. Not surprisingly, much of the research focuses on women.26 Early research quite clearly indicates that having a child has a strong negative effect on educational attainment, but more recent work questions this conclusion.27 Joseph Hotz, Susan McElroy, and Seth Sanders use a creative empirical method in an attempt to obtain causal estimates and find a small negative but statistically insignificant effect of childbearing on teenage mothers' probability of earning a traditional high school diploma.28 The additional responsibilities and demands of parenthood make this finding surprising. Most recently, Jason Fletcher and Barbara Wolfe, using an empirical approach similar that of Hotz and his colleagues, but also controlling for community effects and using alternative comparison groups, find that teenage childbearing decreases the probability of graduating with a traditional high school diploma by 5 to 10 percentage points.29
Out-of-school work also affects the probability of dropping out. Several studies find that students who work while in school are more likely to drop out.30 A closer look reveals, however, that working a few hours a week has no negative effect and may even have a positive effect on graduating.31 The negative effect appears with intensive work involvement— more than twenty hours a week—and with certain types of jobs.32 The effects also vary by gender, race, and ethnicity. Clearly some students who work do not do so voluntarily but as a result of a family situation.
Family Characteristics
Students' family background greatly affects their educational outcomes and is commonly viewed as the most important predictor of schooling achievement.33 Among the strongest family domain dropout predictors are parental education, occupation, and income—in other words, socioeconomic status.34 Although students who need to take a job to help out the family are more likely to drop out of school, Stephen Cameron and James Heckman find that long-run factors associated with parental background and family environment matter the most for students' schooling progress, including graduation from high school.35 These long-run factors may partially reflect parental involvement in school and the greater human capital investment in children's education in relatively well-to-do families.36 Family stability, reflected in both family structure and school mobility, has also been linked to quitting school.37 Potentially important, but less well-researched, are the roles played by family preferences, and attitudes, and how well families are informed about the importance of education in modern society.
School Characteristics
Much of the task of reducing dropout rates falls on the schools. Implicit in NCLB is the notion that schools can affect the dropout decision of students, and research shows that school characteristics do affect student achievement.38 But although some school characteristics, such as school practices and processes, resources, size, and pupil-teacher ratio, are under the control of school policy, others, such as student composition and location, are arguably not. Russell Rumberger and Scott Thomas find that pupil-teacher ratio, the quality of teachers, and school size all influence the dropout probability of students in the expected direction.39 And Magnus Lofstrom reports that spending per pupil, school location, and student composition affect students' dropout probability.40 Furthermore, Cory Koedel finds that teacher quality also determines dropout outcomes.41
Accountability and High-Stakes Exit Exams
High-stakes exit exams are the tests that students must pass to graduate. These exams are controversial for a number of reasons, not least because they may lower high school completion rates, especially those of minority students. Existing research does not provide an entirely clear picture of the effect of high-stakes testing. Brian Jacob found that graduation tests appear to have no effect on the probability of dropping out of high school for the average student, but that they make it significantly more likely that the lowest-performing students, who are disproportionately minorities, will drop out.42 The disproportionately negative effect on low-performing students is also stressed by Thomas Dee and Brian Jacob.43 Research is decidedly mixed. Several other studies indicate a more widespread negative effect of exit exams on high school completion rates.44 But one study finds no link between exit exam requirements and high school completion, even for low-achieving students.45 Overall, most of the evidence suggests that exit exams may not be a graduation barrier for the average student, but that they are for disadvantaged and low-achieving students.
Clearly, of the many factors that affect students' decision to leave school, relatively few, including the economic situation of students' families, are easily affected directly by school policy. But the decision to drop out, once made, is highly costly both to the student and to society
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Journals > Journal: America's High Schools > Article: Finishing High School: Alternative Pathways and Dropout Recovery
Journal Issue: America's High Schools Volume 19 Number 1 Spring 2009
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Finishing High School: Alternative Pathways and Dropout Recovery
Authors: John H. Tyler Magnus Lofstrom
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Costs of Dropping Out
Every year more than a million children leave school without a traditional high school diploma. The costs associated are large, both for the student who drops out and for society as well. Because minority and low-income students are significantly more likely than well-do-do white students to drop out of school, the individual costs fall unevenly across groups and ultimately affect important social issues, such as racial and ethnic education gaps, the income distribution, and health disparities.
Costs to the Individual
The most obvious cost to failing to complete high school is lower expected lifetime earnings. In 2006, the median annual earnings of women without a high school diploma were $13,255; those of men without a diploma were $22,151.46 The median earnings of women and men with a diploma were, respectively, $20,650 and $31,715.47 The earnings of women who drop out are thus only about 65 percent of those of female high school graduates—an annual difference of $7,395. The earnings of men who drop out are slightly less than 70 percent of those of men with diplomas—an annual difference of $9,564.
Graduating from high school does not necessarily cause these earnings differences. Because students self-select into schooling levels by the way they perceive the lifetime benefits and costs to themselves of such schooling, it may be wrong to conclude that if a randomly selected individual dropout were to complete high school, his or her earnings would increase by these amounts. But after reviewing research attempting to obtain the causal effects of education on earnings, Cecilia Rouse concludes that "the basic ‘cross-sectional' relationship (that is, the mean difference in income between those with and without high school degrees) is a fairly good approximation to the causal relationship."48 In addition, Rouse shows that relative to high school graduates, dropouts have higher unemployment rates and lower employment rates. They also work fewer weeks each year.49 Because of these less favorable employment outcomes, the estimated lifetime earnings of dropouts are $260,000 less than those of high school graduates. Rouse also shows that dropouts are less likely to benefit from employer-provided pension plans and health insurance.50
More education may also improve individuals' health in a causal manner. The observed link between low schooling levels, and poor health may be due to other factors, such as income, that are correlated with both schooling and health. Or it could be that the causal arrow runs in the other direction, with poor health preventing the full pursuit of higher schooling. David Cutler and Adriana Lleras-Muney find a clear relationship between education and health that cannot be entirely explained by labor market outcomes or family background and conclude that better health outcomes have to be included as one of the benefits of more education.51 The flip side of this link, of course, is that poorer health and higher health spending are additional costs that dropouts face.
Costs to Society
The costs of failing to graduate from high school are not limited to dropouts themselves, but also spill over to society. These social costs include lower tax revenues, greater public spending on public assistance and health care, and higher crime rates.
Because dropouts do not perform as well in the labor market as high school graduates, as measured by earnings, employment, and unemployment, they also do not contribute as much in terms of tax revenues. Rouse estimates that dropouts pay about 42 percent of what high school graduates pay in federal and state income taxes each year ($1,600 and $3,800, respectively).52 Over a lifetime, Rouse estimates, the difference in the discounted present value of federal and state income tax revenues is about $60,000.53 Given a cohort of 600,000 eighteen-year-old dropouts, these estimates suggest a yearly loss of $36 billion in state and federal income taxes.
Public assistance to dropouts is also out of proportion to their share of the population. Jane Waldfogel, Irwin Garfinkel, and Brendan Kelly report that nearly half of single mothers receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) are high school dropouts and that 27 percent of all single mothers lacking a high school diploma receive TANF (17 percent of high school graduates with no further education).54 Waldfogel and her colleagues estimate that single mothers with a high school education are 24 percent less likely to be on TANF than are those who are high school dropouts.55 The authors also estimate that if all welfare recipients who were high school dropouts were high school graduates, welfare costs would fall some $1.8 billion.56 Public spending on health insurance is also estimated to be higher for dropouts. Peter Muennig estimates that over a lifetime, the discounted average public health insurance spending is $35,000 for school dropouts, compared with $27,000 for high school graduates.57
Dropouts are also greatly overrepresented in U.S. prisons. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that 68 percent of the nation's state prison inmates are dropouts.58 Dropouts constitute 62 percent of white inmates, 69 percent of black inmates, and 78 percent of Hispanic inmates. Although these figures represent strikingly strong relationships between education and crime, the extent of causality is unknown. For example, children who grow up in poor, inner-city neighborhoods are more likely both to drop out of school and to engage in criminal activities during the adolescent and post-adolescent years. It is clearly challenging to estimate the causal effect of education on criminal behavior.
In an influential study, Lance Lochner and Enrico Moretti find that education does causally affect individuals' propensities to engage in criminal activities, though with racial differences.59 Black male high school graduates are more than 3 percentage points less likely to be incarcerated than black dropouts; the share for white males is less than 1 percentage point. Lochner and Moretti also estimate the effect of schooling on different types of crime. They find that, on average, one additional year of schooling will reduce the murder and assault rate by close to 30 percent, motor vehicle theft by 20 percent, arson by 13 percent, and burglary and larceny by about 6 percent. They find no significant negative effect on robbery and rape.60 Their findings indicate that a 1 percent increase in male high school graduation rates could save as much as $1.4 billion a year, or up to $2,100 for each additional male high school graduate.
Students who drop out may also be less effective at parenting and may participate less often and less effectively in the nation's democratic processes. To date there is little research on these costs of school dropout. The discussion so far has dealt only with the costs—individual and social—associated with dropping out. A full social cost-benefit analysis would include potential social benefits associated with having students leave school early, such as lower public spending on education. It could also be that relatively high dropout rates improve the education of students who remain in school, especially if the dropouts were students who commanded much teacher time and energy. But almost certainly the high individual and societal costs associated with dropping out make it very hard to come up with a plausible scenario where the "benefits" of dropping out outweigh the costs.
Dropout Prevention
The high costs associated with dropping out make clear the need for programs to help students stay in school. The Dropout Prevention Center/Network lists hundreds of dropout-prevention programs in its online database of "model programs."61 Only relatively few of these programs, however, have been rigorously evaluated for effectiveness. Even fewer have proved effective in achieving this goal. As Mark Dynarski and Philip Gleason write in a report on dropout-prevention programs, "Dropping out is as hard to prevent as it is easy to do."62 Based on the evidence, one might add that it is equally hard to identify confidently the programs that are effective.
In what follows, we group dropout-prevention interventions into two categories. The first is interventions that set dropout prevention as the primary goal and that target specific students or groups of students. The second is interventions that have a broader goal than dropout prevention and a broader target audience than "at-risk" students, but that, nevertheless, aim to lower dropout rates. The first category embraces programs in the regular school or in the community, alternative schools for at-risk students, and smaller learning communities that tend to fit the "school-within-a-school" model and that target at-risk students. The second, broader category includes school restructuring or school reform models. Broadly stated, programs in both categories aim to lower dropout rates through one or more of four mechanisms: increasing school attendance, increasing student school engagement and learning, building student self-esteem, and helping students cope with the challenges and problems that contribute to the likelihood of dropping out.
To date, relatively few evaluations of dropout-prevention interventions could be considered rigorous. One of the largest rigorously conducted evaluations was a late 1990s study of twenty-one different interventions, each funded by the U.S. Department of Education's School Dropout Demonstration Assistance Program (SDDAP). In addition to the SDDAP evaluations, a second source of evidence on the efficacy of dropout-prevention interventions can be found in the Department of Education's What Works Clearinghouse (WWC), which reviews and synthesizes studies of a wide variety of education interventions. The combined findings of the SDDAP evaluation and the WWC synthesis of dropout-prevention programs leave one less than sanguine about the knowledge base about how to lower dropout rates.
The SDDAP evaluation, conducted by Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., included both targeted and broadly defined dropout-prevention efforts. Targeted interventions were usually evaluated through randomized, controlled experiments, while the evaluations of the school-restructuring efforts were quasi-experimental and used observationally similar schools as the comparison group for SDDAP schools. The evaluation looked at sixteen targeted interventions and five school-restructuring projects. Eight of the interventions took place at the middle school level. Two of the targeted interventions at the high school level were community-based programs aimed at helping students who had already left school acquire a GED.
The key finding from the SDDAP evaluations is that "most programs made almost no difference in preventing dropping out in general."63 Some SDDAP programs did make a difference on some outcomes, and we will take a closer look at one of the more successful programs. One of the more consistent positive findings in the SDDAP evaluations, however, involves programs to increase GED acquisition among students who have already left school. Although increasing the GED attainment rate of school dropouts may be a laudable outcome, it seems less clear that it should be considered as successful dropout prevention.
The picture is hardly any brighter when it comes to findings of the What Works Clearinghouse. To date, the first-wave WWC review of dropout-prevention programs has looked at fifty-nine studies of sixteen programs.64 From this group, ten of the programs had undergone evaluations that were rigorous enough to make it possible to reach firm conclusions about program effectiveness.65 These ten programs include a wide range of interventions: counseling and monitoring, school restructuring and curriculum redesign, financial incentives for students and families, and community services designed to mitigate factors that can negatively affect school achievement and success.66
Of the ten programs, five showed promise in reducing dropout rates.67 Two of the five —Achievement for Latinos through Academic Success (ALAS) and High School Redirection— are no longer active. ALAS, a pilot program launched in San Diego during the early 1990s, was designed to address student, school, family, and community factors that affect dropping out. At the end of the ninth grade, 98 percent of the students who were randomly assigned to the ALAS program were still enrolled, compared with 83 percent of the students in the non-ALAS control group.68 Meanwhile, three years after random assignment, 43 percent of the students assigned to the High School Redirection program—an alternative high school program for students considered at risk—had dropped out, compared with 53 percent of the randomly assigned control group.69
The three remaining positive programs represent three distinct approaches to dropout prevention. One, Check & Connect, is a relatively intensive program for (mostly) high school students; a second, Career Academies, fits the school-within-a-school model; a third, Talent Development High Schools, is best described as whole-school reform. We discuss each in turn.
A Dropout-Prevention Program: Check & Connect
The Check & Connect70 model, developed through a partnership between the University of Minnesota, local public schools, and local community service organizations, was originally funded by the Department of Education. The Check & Connect model "was initially developed for urban middle school students with learning and behavioral challenges and was designed to promote students' engagement with school and learning, and to reduce and prevent dropping out. The model is currently being replicated and field-tested for youth with and without disabilities in grades K–12 in urban and suburban communities."71 Broadly speaking, Check & Connect works with and coordinates services among the student, family, school, and community to help the student succeed and stay in school.
The signature feature of Check & Connect is the assignment of a "monitor" to each student in the program to be the student's mentor and case worker. In the Check component, the monitor continually assesses the student's school performance, including attendance, behavior, and academics. Monitors are trained to follow up quickly at the first sign that a student is struggling in any of these areas. The Connect component combines individualized attention to the student with the coordination of services and information about the student across school personnel, family, and community service providers. The program carries a minimum two-year commitment to students and families, including the promise and ability to follow highly mobile youth from school to school so that students do not lose services when they move from their original program site.
In two separate experimental evaluations, Check & Connect showed positive effects on staying in school and progressing through school. One study showed that ninth-grade students enrolled in Check & Connect were substantially less likely than control group members to have dropped out of school by the end of the year—9 percent compared with 30 percent. Another study showed that by the expected graduation year, 39 percent of students in the Check & Connect treatment group had dropped out of school compared with 58 percent of the control group. The high dropout rate associated with both groups indicates the level of dropout risk present in the population targeted by Check & Connect. The cost of implementing the Check & Connect model was about $1,400 per student during the 2001–02 school year.72
The School-within-a-School Model: Career Academies
Career academies are another intervention that rigorous evidence shows effective in lowering dropout rates, at least for students most at risk of dropping out.73 The career academy model has three key features. First, it is organized as a school-within-a-school: students in a smaller and more personal learning atmosphere stay with the same teachers over the three or four years of high school. Second, it includes both academic and vocational coursework, with the two integrated in the curriculum and in pedagogy. And, third, it uses partnerships between the academy and local employers to build links between school and work and to provide students with career and work-based learning opportunities.
Begun in the 1970s, the career academy model has both evolved in concept and grown in numbers over time. Today some 1,500 career academies nationwide serve a much wider set of students than the "vocational ed" students who were seen as the original constituents of the academies.
The most important study of career academies is an experimental evaluation of more than 1,700 students who applied for admission to one of nine career academies across the nation. The study found that among high-risk youth, the career academies reduced the baseline dropout rate of 32 percent by 11 percentage points and that in the students' projected twelfth-grade year, 40 percent of the high-risk academy students had earned enough credits to graduate compared with only 26 percent of the high-risk students in the control group.74 The best cost estimates are that in 2004 the per-pupil cost of educating a student in a career academy was $600 more than the average per-pupil cost of non-academy students.75
High School Reform Models: Talent Development High Schools
High school reform models do not usually state "dropout prevention" as the sole objective for school restructuring. Nevertheless, these reform models often have goals related to dropout prevention, in particular increasing students' school engagement and academic achievement. Common components of many reform models include: reorganizing schools into smaller "learning communities"; focusing instruction and curricula on careers or on intensive or high-level English and math instruction, or both; increasing family involvement; and sometimes focusing on a college preparatory curriculum for everyone.
Many different reform models have been tried over the years, most without rigorous evidence of success. One exception is Talent Development High Schools (TDHS), a reform model for large high schools that face persistent problems with student attendance, behavior, performance, and dropout rates. The model, developed at Johns Hopkins University, calls for schools to reorganize into small learning communities that feature a curriculum designed to prepare all students for high-level English and math courses, along with measures to increase parent and community involvement in the school. Begun as a partnership between Johns Hopkins and a high school in Baltimore, the TDHS program now includes schools in forty-three districts in fifteen states across the nation.76 The added cost is about $350 per student per year.77
A research design that followed twenty cohorts of ninth graders for up to four years in high school in Philadelphia found that 68 percent of the students in TDHS schools were promoted to tenth grade compared with 60 percent of the comparison group.78 These positive TDHS findings are notable as it has been hard for high school restructuring efforts to document positive results on outcomes of interest, including keeping students in school. At the same time, the findings should probably be viewed with some caution because they are based on a quasi-experimental research design.
Other Programs
As noted, there are many, many dropout-prevention programs, most of which are "stand alone" programs and many of which are much larger than either ALAS or Check & Connect. As examples, the Valued Youth Program served 108 schools in twenty-four cities in the United States and Brazil during 2002–03, along with an unknown number of schools in Great Britain; the Teen Outreach Program served more than 13,000 students across sixteen states during the 2001–02 school year.79 These and other larger-scale programs, however, have not been rigorously evaluated, and thus in spite of their apparent popularity, their effectiveness in reducing dropout rates remains unknown.
One program that has been rigorously evaluated through random assignment is the Quantum Opportunities Program (QOP). An intensive and relatively expensive program that offers comprehensive services that begin in the ninth grade, QOP can last for up to five years, providing services even after a student drops out. In six of seven QOP demonstration sites, the cost of the program ranged from $22,000 to $28,000 per enrollee (in 2006 dollars) over the full five years of the demonstration, and labor costs in another QOP demonstration site made the program there even more expensive. In spite of the high costs and intensive nature of the QOP model, experimental evaluations do not offer evidence that QOP participants were more likely to advance in or complete school than were the control group non-participants.80 These examples suggest that one cannot use a program's popularity or size, cost, or even intensity as evidence of effectiveness.81
Summary
An examination of the dropout-prevention interventions that show measurable results shines some light on what it likely takes to reduce a student's chance of dropping out. Successful programs have some or most of five elements in common. The first element is close mentoring and monitoring of students. With restructuring models, this mentoring occurs as part of the movement to smaller schools or to school-within-a-school models. The normally high adult-student ratio in a smaller learning environment would have to be higher still to reach the level of monitoring found, for example, in Check & Connect. In the High School Redirection model, teachers are encouraged to serve as mentors as well as instructors, and classes are kept small to foster high levels of individual attention. The second element is case management of individual students. Again, case management is most likely to happen in a restructuring model with a movement to a smaller learning community. The remaining three elements are family outreach; curricular reforms that focus either on a career-oriented or experiential approach or an emphasis on gaining proficiency in English and math, or both; and attention to a student's out-of-school problems that can affect attendance, behavior, and performance.
In closing, we note one complication in designing and implementing dropout- prevention programs. Namely, although common risk factors are important in helping to identify potential dropouts, they are relatively inefficient predictors of who will in fact drop out.82 For example, the risk factors that best predict dropout for high school students are high absenteeism, being over-age by two years, having low grades, and having a child. Using these factors should help identify a group of students with the highest probability of dropping out. Mark Dynarski and Philip Gleason found that these factors would in fact identify a group where one in three students would actually drop out. Although this rate is higher than the baseline 15 percent dropout rate that Dynarski and Gleason find based on the full sample of high school students, one could still question the use of these predictors to assign students to dropout-prevention programs. After all, a program serving students based on these predictors would serve many students who would not need the services and would fail to serve many students who would need them.83 Because most programs use a common set of risk factors to target students for intervention, Dynarski and Gleason's work helps to explain why so few programs show positive results, and it challenges program designers and practitioners to develop better ways to identify potential dropouts.
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Conclusion
In a world in which education is becoming ever more important, finding solutions to the dropout problem is one of the most pressing issues facing America's high schools. A first step on this path is to accumulate data that will allow for a more accurate depiction of the dropout problem. Most states now have data systems in place that assign unique identification numbers to public school students. These student IDs can be used to link students to school enrollment and graduation data, providing a way to produce accurate enrollment and graduation statistics for students who remain in public schools in the state. These state-by-state systems rarely allow the accurate tracking of a student who leaves a school in one state to re-enroll in another state—a problem given the relatively high dropout rates associated with student mobility. At the same time, states are still likely to be able to obtain rather accurate graduation and dropout statistics because the prevalence of across-state moves for school-leaving-age students is relatively low. The ideal solution would be a national student identifier akin to Social Security numbers that would allow for dropout statistics from the national to the state to the individual school level.
Even if the United States were to move to a national student ID system, it would still be necessary to settle on how the GED credential should be viewed in computing dropout statistics. Should students who are enrolled in high school in a GED Option program be counted in enrollment statistics? Should students in these programs who get their GED while still enrolled in high school be counted as high school graduates or as dropouts or as partially-weighted high school graduates? How should students who drop out of school and obtain out-of-school GEDs "on time" for their graduation cohort be counted when it comes to computing dropout rates? Given the many students who obtain a GED, answers to these questions will have a large effect on ultimate dropout statistics. Given the evidence indicating that dropouts with the GED credential do not do as well in the labor market, or pursue postsecondary schooling to the same extent, as traditional high school graduates, treating GED holders as equivalent to high school graduates seems inappropriate.92
Finally, what is to be done to lower dropout rates and increase high school graduation rates? The research base for answering this question is woefully inadequate. Although hundreds of dropout-prevention programs exist, from small, discrete programs to whole-school reform models, little hard evidence reveals what does and does not work to decrease the probability of dropping out. The direction for future research is thus clear: more rigorous studies of dropout-prevention strategies are needed. Studies that take advantage of lottery assignment mechanisms in programs that tend to have more applicants than places can produce powerful results that can withstand scrutiny. Likewise, pilot programs can often be designed to generate a rigorous and convincing evaluation, as did the previously discussed ALAS program in San Diego.
Increasing the minimum school-leaving age is another possible, partial, policy solution to the dropout problem. States vary both in minimum school-leaving age, between sixteen and eighteen, and in the extent to which they offer exemptions to the rule based on, for example, parental consent or student-related work reasons, or both.93 Research has quite consistently shown that students in states with a higher school-leaving age stay in school longer.94 But before concluding that all states should raise to eighteen the age at which students may legally leave school, it is necessary to recognize that the most recent research indicates that raising the minimum drop-out age above sixteen will not fix the dropout problem. Philip Oreopoulos estimates that such a change would decrease the dropout rate about 1.4 percentage points.95 He also finds that enforcing the school-leaving age is a factor and recommends that "if states are serious about lowering dropout rates through compulsory schooling, they need to better enforce these laws." Overall, minimum school-leaving-age policies appear to be a tool that, used properly, can have some, but not a large, effect on dropout rates.
Although researchers have much to learn about which dropout-prevention programs work, they do know that trying to keep students in school is not cheap. They have also learned, however, that the costs to society of each student who fails to graduate from high school are high. What lies ahead is learning not only how to keep students in school, but also how to muster the public will to fund and support programs that are proven effective in doing so.
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Endnotes
Claudia Goldin, "The Human Capital Century and American Leadership: Virtues of the Past," Journal of Economic History 61 (2001): 263–92.
D. P. Gardner and others, "A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform. An Open Letter to the American People. A Report to the Nation and the Secretary of Education" (Washington: National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983).
John M. Bridgeland, John J. DiIulio Jr., and Karen Burke Morison, "The Silent Epidemic: Perspectives of High School Dropouts," Report by Civic Enterprises (2006).
Note also that in neither the event nor the status dropout rate are GED holders counted as dropouts.
Stephen V. Cameron and James J. Heckman, "The Nonequivalence of High School Equivalents," Journal of Labor Economics 11, no. 1 (1993): 1–47; David Boesel, Nabeel Alsalam, and Thomas M. Smith, "Educational and Labor Market Performance of GED Recipients" (Washington: Office of Educational Research and Improvement, Department of Education, 1998); Richard J. Murnane, John B. Willett, and John H. Tyler, "Who Benefits from a GED? Evidence from High School and Beyond," Review of Economics and Statistics 82, no. 1 (2000): 23–37; John H. Tyler, "The Economic Benefits of the GED: Lessons from Recent Research," Review of Educational Research 73, no. 3 (2003): 369–403; John H. Tyler and Magnus Lofstrom, "Is the GED an Effective Route to Postsecondary Education for School Dropouts?" Working Paper 13816 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008); John H. Tyler, Richard J. Murnane, and John B. Willett, "Who Benefits from a GED? Evidence for Females from High School and Beyond," Economics of Education Review 22, no. 3 (2003): 237–47.
This is not to say that the GED does not improve labor market and schooling outcomes of GED-credentialed dropouts compared to non-credentialed dropouts. Existing research indicates that some dropouts benefit in the labor market from obtaining the GED credential; see, for example, Murnane, Willett, and Tyler, "Who Benefits from a GED?" (see note 5), and many postsecondary education institutions require some type of "certification," such as the GED, for admission.
Duncan Chaplin, "GEDs for Teenagers: Are There Unintended Consequences?" (Washington: Urban Institute, 1999); Dean Lillard, "Do General Educational Development Certificate Policies Induce Youth out of High School?" unpublished manuscript, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y, 2001; James J. Heckman, Paul A. LaFontaine, and Pedro L. Rodriguez, "Taking the Easy Way Out: How the GED Testing Program Induces Students to Drop Out," Working Paper 14044 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008).
Virginia Department of Education, "Board of Education Agenda Item" (www.doe.virginia.gov/boe/meetings/ 2008/01_jan/agenda_items/item_d.pdf. [July 1, 2008]).
GED Testing Service, Policies and Procedures Manual (Washington: General Educational Development Testing Service, 2008).
GED Testing Service, "Uses of the GED Tests with Students Enrolled in Traditional Accredited Secondary Schools," unpublished discussion paper, 1998. The twelve states are Alabama, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and Wisconsin (personal communication from Margaret Patterson, director of research and psychometrics, GED Testing Service, 2008). In addition to being behind in graduation credits, there are other state-specific criteria that students must meet to be eligible for the GED Option program.
In certain states there are circumstances under which an individual in a GED Option program will actually receive a high school diploma.
Fulton, Missouri, Public Schools, GED Option (www.fulton.k12.mo.us/~Fulton_Academy/GED/q&a.htm [July 27, 2008]). Oregon Department of Education, "Oregon GED Option Program for Selected Secondary Students: Questions and Answers" (www.ode.state.or.us/teachlearn/certificates/gedinschool/gedqanda.pdf [July 27, 2008]).
Mississippi Department of Education, "State Dropout Prevention Plan" (www.mde.k12.ms.us/Dropout_Prevention/Dropout%20Prevention%20Plan%20-%20Final.pdf [July 27, 2008]).
James J. Heckman and Paul A. LaFontaine, "The American High School Graduation Rate: Trends and Levels," Working Paper 13670 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007).
Ibid.
Ibid.
Jay P. Greene, "High School Graduation Rates in the United States," Manhattan Institute for Policy Research Civic Report, November 2001; Christopher B. Swanson and Duncan Chaplin, Counting High School Graduates When Graduates Count: Measuring Graduation Rates under the High Stakes of NCLB (Washington: Education Policy Center, Urban Institute, 2003); Christopher B. Swanson, "Who Graduates? Who Doesn't? A Statistical Portrait of Public High School Graduation, Class of 2001" (Washington: Urban Institute Education Policy Center, 2004); Lawrence Mishel and Roy Joydeep, Rethinking High School Graduation Rates and Trends (Washington: Economic Policy Institute, 2006).
Data Quality Campaign, "Data Quality Campaign: Using Data to Improve Student Achievement" (www.dataqualitycampaign.org/ [March 15, 2008]).
Swanson and Chaplin, Counting High School Graduates When Graduates Count (see note 17).
Bridgeland, DiIulio, and Morison, "The Silent Epidemic" (see note 3).
Russell W. Rumberger, "Dropping out of Middle School: A Multilevel Analysis of Students and Schools," American Educational Research Journal 32, no. 3 (1995): 583–625.
Bridgeland, DiIulio, and Morison, "The Silent Epidemic" (see note 3); Russell W. Rumberger, "Why Students Drop out of School," in Dropouts in America: Confronting the Graduation Rate Crisis, edited by G. Orfield (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Education Press, 2004), pp. 131–55.
Jennifer Berktold, Sonya Geis, and Phillip Kaufman, "Subsequent Educational Attainment of High School Dropouts" (Washington: National Center for Education Statistics, Statistical Analysis Report, 1998).
K. L. Alexander, D. R. Entwisle, and N. S. Kabbani, "The Dropout Process in Life Course Perspective: Early Risk Factors at Home and School," Teachers College Record 103, no. 5 (2001): 760–822; R. B. Ekstrom and others, "Who Drops Out of High School and Why? Findings of a National Study," Teachers College Record 87 (1986): 356–73; Pete Goldschmidt and Jia Wang, "When Can Schools Affect Dropout Behavior? A Longitudinal Multilevel Analysis," American Educational Research Journal 36, no. 4 (1999): 715–38; Magnus Lofstrom, "Why Are Hispanic and African-American Dropout Rates So High?" Williams Review 2 (2007): 91–121; Russell W. Rumberger, "Dropping out of Middle School" (see note 21).
Rumberger, "Why Students Drop out of School" (see note 22).
Russell W. Rumberger, "High School Dropouts: A Review of Issues and Evidence," Review of Educational Research 57, no. 2 (1987): 101–21, reports that none of the male dropouts gave pregnancy as the primary reason for leaving school.
K. A. Moore and L. C. Waite, "Early Childbearing and Educational Attainment," Family Planning Perspectives 9 (1977): 220–25.
Joseph V. Hotz, Susan Williams McElroy, and Seth G. Sanders, "Teenage Childbearing and Its Life Cycle Consequences: Exploiting a Natural Experiment," Journal of Human Resources 40 (2005): 683–715.
Jason M. Fletcher and Barbara L. Wolfe, "Education and Labor Market Consequences of Teenage Childbearing: Evidence Using the Timing of Pregnancy Outcomes and Community Fixed Effects," Working Paper 13847 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008).
Goldschmidt and Wang, "When Can Schools Affect Dropout Behavior?" (see note 24); Gary G. Wehlage and Robert A. Rutter, "Dropping Out: How Much Do Schools Contribute to the Problem?" Teachers College Record 87, no. 3 (1986): 374–92.
John Robert Warren and Jennifer C. Lee, "The Impact of Adolescent Employment on High School Dropout: Differences by Individual and Labor-Market Characteristics," Social Science Research 32 (2003): 98–128.
Ralph B. McNeal Jr., "Are Students Being Pulled out of High School? The Effect of Adolescent Employment on Dropping Out," Sociology of Education 70 (July 1997): 206–20. John Robert Warren and Jennifer C. Lee, "The Impact of Adolescent Employment on High School Dropout" (see note 31).
Rumberger, "Why Students Drop out of School" (see note 22).
Ekstrom and others, "Who Drops out of High School and Why" (see note 24); Russell W. Rumberger, "High School Dropouts" (see note 26); Rumberger, "Why Students Drop out of School" (see note 22); Will Jordan, Julia Lara, and James M. McPartland, "Exploring the Complexity of Early Dropout Causal Structures," Report 48 (Center for Research on Effective Schooling for Disadvantaged Students, 1994).
Stephen V. Cameron and James J. Heckman, "The Dynamics of Educational Attainment for Black, Hispanic, and White Males," Journal of Political Economy 109 (2001): 455–99.
Robert Haveman and Barbara Wolfe, "The Determinants of Children's Attainments: A Review of Methods and Findings," Journal of Economic Literature 33 (1995): 1829–78.
Goldschmidt and Wang, "When Can Schools Affect Dropout Behavior?" (see note 24); Camilla A. Lehr and others, "Essential Tools, Increasing Rates of School Completion: Moving from Policy and Research to Practice" (University of Minnesota: National Center on Secondary Education and Transition, College of Education and Human Development, 2004).
Rumberger, "Why Students Drop out of School" (see note 22).
Russell W. Rumberger and Scott L. Thomas, "The Distribution of Dropout and Turnover Rates among Urban and Suburban High Schools," Sociology of Education 73, no. 1 (2000): 39–67.
Magnus Lofstrom, "Why Are Hispanic and African-American Dropout Rates So High?" (see note 24).
Cory Koedel, "Teacher Quality and Dropout Outcomes in a Large, Urban School District," paper presented at the 13th Annual Meeting of the Society of Labor Economists, May 9, 2008, New York, N.Y.
Brian A. Jacob, "Remedial Education and Student Achievement: A Regression-Discontinuity Analysis," Review of Economics and Statistics 86, no. 1 (2004).
Thomas S. Dee and Brian A. Jacob, "Do High School Exit Exams Influence Educational Attainment or Labor Market Performance?" Working Paper 12199 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006).
Audrey Amrein and David Berliner, "An Analysis of Some Unintended and Negative Consequences of High-Stakes Testing," unpublished paper, Educational Policy Studies Laboratory, Educational Policy Research Unit, Arizona State University, 2002; John Robert Warren, Krista N. Jenkins, and Rachael B. Kulick, "High School Exit Examinations and State-Level Completion and GED Rates 1975 through 2002," Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis 28, no. 2 (2006): 131–52.
John Robert Warren and Melanie R. Edwards, "High School Exit Examinations and High School Completion: Evidence from the Early 1990s," Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis 27, no. 1 (2005): 53–74.
Bruce H. Webster Jr. and Alemayehu Bishaw, "Income, Earnings, and Poverty Data from the 2006 American Community Survey" (Washington: American Community Survey Reports, U.S. Census Bureau, 2007).
The data are for individuals twenty-five years and older with reported earnings. The earnings of high school graduates are likely to be understated since dropouts with a GED are included in this group.
Cecilia Elena Rouse, "The Labor Market Consequences of an Inadequate Education," in The Price We Pay: The Economic and Political Consequences of Inadequate Education, edited by Clive Belfield and Henry M. Levin (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2007).
Ibid.
Ibid.
David M. Cutler and Adriana Lleras-Muney, "Education and Health: Evaluating Theories and Evidence," Working Paper 12352 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2006).
Rouse, "The Labor Market Consequences of an Inadequate Education" (see note 48).
Ibid.
Jane Waldfogel, Irwin Garfinkel, and Brendan Kelly, "Public Assistance Programs: How Much Could Be Saved with Improved Education?" in The Price We Pay: The Economic and Political Consequences of Inadequate Education, edited by Clive Belfield and Henry M. Levin (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2007).
This estimate may not represent a causal relationship between education and welfare participation since no exogenous variation in schooling is used to identify its effect.
Waldfogel, Garfinkel, and Kelly, "Public Assistance Programs: How Much Could Be Saved with Improved Education?" (see note 54).
Peter Muennig, "Health Returns to Education Interventions," in The Price We Pay: The Economic and Political Consequences of Inadequate Education, edited by Belfield and Levin (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2007).
Caroline Wolf Harlow, "Education and Correctional Populations" (Washington: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2003).
Lance Lochner and Enrico Moretti, "The Effect of Education on Crime: Evidence from Prison Inmates, Arrests, and Self-Reports," American Economic Review 94 (2004): 1.
Ibid.
National Dropout Prevention Center/Network (www.dropoutprevention.org/ndpcdefault.htm [March 15, 2008]).
Mark Dynarski and Philip Gleason, "How Can We Help? What We Have Learned from Evaluations of Federal Dropout-Prevention Programs," Report for the U.S. Department of Education (Princeton, N.J.: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., 1998).
Ibid. Dynarski and Gleason go on to say that this result is consistent with what was found by two earlier U.S. Department of Education–sponsored evaluations of other dropout-prevention programs.
Institute of Education Sciences, "Dropout Prevention: Overview," What Works Clearinghouse (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/reports/dropout/topic/ [March 15, 2008]).
Because participation in dropout-prevention programs is not a random event, simple comparisons of dropout statistics between program participants and nonparticipants are unlikely to provide information on the true effectiveness of programs. In general, program evaluation studies are considered to be "rigorous" if the study design is either a randomized, controlled experiment or is a strong quasi-experimental design.
Institute of Education Sciences, "Dropout Prevention Overview" (see note 64).
A sixth intervention, Financial Incentives for Teen Parents to Stay in School, also showed some positive dropout-reduction results. However, this intervention is part of state welfare programs and thus not a dropout-prevention program per se.
K. A. Larson and Russell W. Rumberger, "ALAS: Achievement for Latinos through Academic Success," in Staying in School. A Technical Report of Three Dropout Prevention Projects for Junior High School Students with Learning and Emotional Disabilities, edited by H. Thornton (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, Institute on Community Integration, 1995).
Institute of Education Sciences, "WWC Intervention Report: High School Redirection," What Works Clearinghouse (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/WWC_HS_Redirection_041607.pdf [March 10, 2008]).
Information on the Check & Connect program was largely synthesized from information found on the Check & Connect website at http://ici.umn.edu/checkandconnect/.
Check & Connect, "Check & Connect: A Model for Promoting Students' Engagement with School" (http://ici.umn.edu/checkandconnect/ [July 1, 2008]).
Institute of Education Sciences, "WWC Intervention Report: Check & Connect," What Works Clearinghouse (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/WWC_Check_Connect_092106.pdf [March 15, 2008]).
The information on the career academy model was largely taken from the MDRC evaluation report. See James J. Kemple and Jason C. Snipes, "Career Academies: Impacts on Students' Engagement and Performance in High School" (New York: MDRC, 2000).
James J. Kemple, "Career Academies: Long-Term Impacts on Labor Market Outcomes, Educational Attainment, and Transitions to Adulthood" (New York: MDRC, 2008). We note two additional facts about the career academies evaluation. First, among moderate- to low-risk students, there were no differences in dropout rates or earned high school credits between the academy and non-academy students. Second, a longer-term follow-up study found no differences between academy and non-academy students in terms of high school completion. We note, however, that high school completion in the later study included both receiving a high school diploma and obtaining a GED.
Institute of Education Sciences, "WWC Intervention Report: Career Academies," What Works Clearinghouse (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/WWC_Career_Academies_100506.pdf [March 20, 2008]).
Center for Social Organization of Schools, "Talent Development High Schools" (www.csos.jhu.edu/tdhs/about/model.htm [March 15, 2008]).
Institute of Education Sciences, "WWC Intervention Report: Talent Development High Schools," What Works Clearinghouse (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/WWC_Talent_Development_071607.pdf [March 20, 2008]).
James J. Kemple, Corinne M. Herlihy, and Thomas J. Smith, "Making Progress toward Graduation: Evidence from the Talent Development High School Model" (New York: MDRC, 2005).
C. A. Lehr and others, "Essential Tools: Increasing Rates of School Completion: Moving from Policy and Research to Practice" (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, Institute on Community Integration, National Center on Secondary Education and Transition, 2004).
Institute of Education Sciences, "WWC Intervention Report: The Quantum Opportunity Program," What Works Clearinghouse (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/WWC_QOP_070207.pdf [March 15, 2008]).
We note that an early study of a QOP pilot program did show positive results, but flaws in this study leave one uncertain as to the reliability of the results.
Mark Dynarski and Philip Gleason, "Do We Know Whom to Serve? Issues in Using Risk Factors to Identify Dropouts," a report for the U.S. Department of Education (Princeton, N.J.: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., 1998).
Ibid.
General Educational Development Testing Service, "1980 GED Statistical Report" (Washington: American Council on Education, 1981); General Educational Development Testing Service, "2006 GED Testing Program Statistical Report" (Washington: American Council on Education, 2007); National Center for Education Statistics, "Digest of Education Statistics: 2006" (U.S. Department of Education, 2007).
Murnane, Willett, and Tyler, "Who Benefits from a GED?" (see note 5).
Ibid.; John H. Tyler, Richard J. Murnane, and John B. Willett, "Estimating the Labor Market Signaling Value of the GED," Quarterly Journal of Economics 115, no. 3 (2000): 431–68.
New York City Department of Education, "Transfer High Schools" (http://schools.nyc.gov/Offices/OMPG/TransferHighSchools/default.htm [July 1, 2008]).
New York City Department of Education, "Young Adult Borough Centers" (http://schools.nyc.gov/Offices/OMPG/YouthAdultBoroughCenters/default.htm [July 1, 2008]).
School and enrollment information on New York's transfer high schools and YABCs was provided via personal communication on July 1 and July 2, 2008, with John Duval of the Office of Multiple Pathways to Graduation in the New York City Department of Education.
National External Diploma Program, "National External Diploma Program" (https://www.casas.org/home/?fuseaction=nedp.welcome [March 15, 2008]).
In 2008, about $573 million in federal funds were directed toward adult education programs for individuals of all ages who lack a high school diploma. See U.S. Government Office of Management and Budget, "Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008" (www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2008/pdf/budget/education.pdf [July 16, 2008]). Unfortunately, there are few rigorous evaluations of the effectiveness of the adult education programs toward which these funds are directed.
Cameron and Heckman, "The Nonequivalence of High School Equivalents" (see note 5); Tyler and Lofstrom, "Is the GED an Effective Route to Postsecondary Education for School Dropouts?" (see note 5).
National Center for Education Statistics, "Digest of Education Statistics: 2006" (U.S. Department of Education, 2007).
Joshua D. Angrist and Alan Krueger, "Does Compulsory School Attendance Affect Schooling and Earnings?" Quarterly Journal of Economics 106, no. 4 (1991): 979–1014; Philip Oreopoulos, "Should We Raise the Minimum School Leaving Age to Help Disadvantaged Youth? Evidence from Recent Changes to Compulsory Schooling in the United States," in An Economic Framework for Understanding and Assisting Disadvantaged Youth, edited by Jonathan Gruber (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, forthcoming 2009).
Philip Oreopoulos, "Should We Raise the Minimum School Leaving Age to Help Disadvantaged Youth?" (see note 94
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Nov 25 2012
Girls Drop Out Rate Increases in Tanzania Due to Pregnancies.
By: Knollegga Walubengo
“Tanzania: 5,000 Pregnant Girls Drop Out of School”
By Anne Robi, 16 November 2012
According to the Minister for Education and Vocational Training, Dr. Shukuru Kawambwa, a total of 5,157 girls dropped out of primary schools dues to pregnancies last calendar year; with that the number of girls in secondary schools has decreased from 48 to 45 percent. Besides other challenges that the government is facing in terms of providing education to girls, they are also struggling with helping pregnant girls continue with schooling. Unlike the United States where they have continuation schools, Tanzania does not have that therefore they let the girls seek secondary education by registering as private candidates.
In the last few years Tanzania has been one of the countries with the highest number of child pregnancies causing about 16,999 girls to drop out of school between 2006 and 2009. According to the Minister for Community Development, Gender and Children, Ummy Ally Mwalimu, the society is supposed to invest heavily in girls education. She also states, “ By educating a girl child, it is one way of saving her from child pregnancy, because experience shows that each year of educating girls give them more chances of making good decisions.” Based on these reports, most of the girls do not get pregnant out of their own will, 3 out of 10 experience sexual abuse before they are 18 years old. With half of the abuse happening at home and the other half centered around school. The government needs to take extreme measures to ensure that girls are protected from sexual predators. Being a young African girl and hearing stories from friends and family, it has been made clear to me that in most African homes, girls are afraid to report if they are being sexually abused, especially if it is by a family member. In most cases, they do not bring up these incidents until later on in their lives. If this is affecting their education attainment, then the government should take an initiative in helping the girls face their fears. If the number of girls getting pregnant cannot be controlled then schools should provide facilities that can cater to mothers. Some may argue that there isn’t enough funds to provide such facilities but by doing so might be one way of investing in girls education.
Young women perform in traditional dress in Arusha, Tanzania.
Photo: Lauren Everitt/AllAfrica
One point that the Minister mentioned that I find very relevant is the educating of the community about the dangers of early pregnancies. She said that early pregnancies affect the girls physically, psychologically and emotionally. On top of early pregnancies, statistics show that one out of three girls get married before they reach the age of 18. The government seems to be taking an initiative with the help of outside agencies to talk the issue of early pregnancies and making sure that the girls are given an equal opportunity in education.
Like many other African countries, Tanzania is struggling with providing equal education for their girls and because there is a lack of education in the community, girls end up suffering much more than the boys. As Kamiah mentioned on her previous post, there are about sixteen million girls in Sub-Saharan Africa who are denied access to education and there is a disparity between the attendance of boys and girls.
There are two fundamental problems here: one cultural, and the other one educational. The cultural problem is one of inequity, where boys chances in life far outstrip those experienced by girls. Tanzanian society, like the majority of African societies needs to realize that no one wins when its females are culturally marginalized. Marginalized women are a terrible loss to society. At the same time that Tanzania is working to improve educational access as a fundamental human right to all, it must also actively engage all its citizens in changing attitudes regarding women and girls.
It’s evident that the circumstances the girls face are different from those of boys which affects their attendance in schools.Therefore the government should not only focus on increasing the number of girls in schools but make sure that the community is educated about the importance of girls education. Also, the girls should be educated about the consequences of early pregnancies and ways that they can either abstain or protect themselves from sex and getting pregnant. Girls education has and still is an issue that many countries in the developing world are struggling but with the right information, the rates can continue to increase and girls can be able to have an equal chance in education. With universal education in most countries, early pregnancies should not hinder girls in attaining their education. They should at least be made aware that they can continue with their studies if they were to get pregnant instead of fully dropping out. Education is a basic right and pregnant girls should have the opportunity of completing their studies no matter their circumstances.
Sources and Related Articles:
Anne Robi, Tanzania: 5,000 Pregnant Girls Drop Out of School (Nov 16, 2012) http://allafrica.com/stories/201211160227.html
Anthony Tambwe Tanzania: Massive School Drop Out Disturbing (Oct 13, 2012) http://allafrica.com/stories/201211160227.html
Rise in school dropout rate, truancy blamed on parents
Parents and guardians have been blamed for the increase in the number of dropouts and absenteeism in schools with education stakeholders in Nzega District suggesting legal measures be taken against such adults.
TheCitizen