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If accurate, these statistics are staggering.
- It’s a nickname no principal could be proud of: “Dropout Factory,” a high school where no more than 60 percent of the students who start as freshmen make it to their senior year. That dubious distinction applies to more than one in 10 high schools across America.
“If you’re born in a neighborhood or town where the only high school is one where graduation is not the norm, how is this living in the land of equal opportunity?” asks Bob Balfanz, the researcher at Johns Hopkins University who defines such a school as a “dropout factory.”There are about 1,700 regular or vocational high schools nationwide that fit that description, according to an analysis of Education Department data conducted by Johns Hopkins for The Associated Press. That’s 12 percent of all such schools, no more than a decade ago but no less, either.
While some of the missing students transferred, most dropped out, Balfanz says. The data tracked senior classes for three years in a row—2004, 2005 and 2006—to make sure local events like plant closures weren’t to blame for the low retention rates.
The highest concentration of dropout factories is in large cities or high-poverty rural areas in the South and Southwest. Most have high proportions of minority students. These schools are tougher to turn around, because their students face challenges well beyond the academic ones—the need to work as well as go to school, for example, or a need for social services.
It seems as those these statistics have not changed much over the years so wouldn’t one think there would be emphasis on the areas of the country where this problem is most prevalent.
Maybe this school in the Baltimore area would be a good model for others to emulate:
Teachers and administrators at Baltimore Talent Development High School, where 90 percent of kids are on track toward graduating on time, are working hard to make sure students don’t have an experience like Miller’s.
The school, which sits in the middle of a high-crime, impoverished neighborhood two miles west of downtown Baltimore, was founded by Balfanz and others four years ago as a laboratory for getting kids out on time with a diploma and ready for college.
Whatever the answer, it is unacceptable in this country to have schools where graduation rates are as dismal as expressed in this piece.
Written by Sue



~J~ Says:
October 30th, 2007 at 9:19 amVisit ~J~
Whatever Balfanz and his team did needs to be copied at all schools in the country.
Guss Says:
October 30th, 2007 at 9:33 amVisit Guss
I am going through a personal thing with a granddaughter who just doesn’t care about school and we are at our wits end at what to do. Nothing seems to work. I would never strike a child but that’s the only thing that hasn’t been tried. I wish that someone would write a post on kids not caring about school and maybe the thousands of people that are having this same problem could get some ideas on what else to try.
I try not to discuss my personal problems in public but we need help.
Sue Says:
October 30th, 2007 at 9:43 amVisit Sue
Guss:
I have seen that before with friends etc. and it is not easy when your child/grandchild turns off on school. Phyical confrontation on any level in my way of thinking doesn’t work. Usually it just makes a child more defiant.
I don’t know the age of the child but have you tried counseling through school or a change of schools if that is possible?
There are no easy answers, especially as a child grows in to the early teen years but your idea for a post on this issue is a good one, as you are correct, there are many people in the same situation as yours.
Sue Says:
October 30th, 2007 at 9:59 amVisit Sue
Guss:
Here is a site which might be of some value.
http://parentscount.disciplinehelp.com/parent/detail.cfm?behaviorID=82&title=The%20Rebel&step=Action
There are links which deal directly with schooling difficulties.