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MICHIGAN GRADUATION RATES SLIGHTLY BEHIND NATION

Michigan's overall graduation is virtually the same as the national
rate, but it shows some significant gaps among some ethnic groups,
according to a report released this week by the Editorial Projects in
Education Research Center.  The report
<http://www.edweek.org/ew/toc/2008/06/05/index.html> , part of the
center's Diplomas Count 2008 project, showed overall 70.5 percent of
Michigan high school students graduated within four years in 2005, the
most recent national data available, compared to the national rate of
70.6 percent.   That put Michigan 32nd among the states.  But the report
showed some significant racial disparities in Michigan's graduation
rate.   Only 42.2 percent of blacks overall graduated from state high
schools, compared to 55.3 percent nationally.   And 45.9 percent of
Hispanics graduated compared to 57.8 percent nationally.  And those
racial gaps translated to both genders.   Some 34.6 percent of black
boys and 48.5 percent of black girls graduated, compared to 48.2 percent
and 61.3 percent respectively across the nation.   For Hispanics, 41.1
percent of boys and 45.7 percent of girls graduated, compared to
national rates of 48.2 percent and 61.3 percent respectively.

 

The state also showed gaps, though not as large, for American
Indian/Alaskan native children and Asian/Pacific islander children.  The
report did acknowledge that its method of calculating graduation rates
differed from the state's method.   Michigan's formula for calculating
graduation rates in 2005 yielded a 17.2 percentage point higher result
to 87.7 percent.   And the formula for the 2008 graduating class will be
different because it will use the single record student database to
track students across districts.  The report also looks at the effects
of P-16 councils, which coordinate curriculum and programs from
preschool through a four-year degree, on graduation rates.   But to be
effective, the report said, the councils have to set measurable goals
and report regularly on the progress toward those goals.  There are 40
P-16 councils across the country, but the report said about half of
those have been created since 2005 and so did not have any possible
effect on the statistics in the report.   And of those now in existence,
only 18 have performance goals.

Though such bodies have been discussed in Michigan, the constitutional
autonomy of the state universities could limit the effectiveness of such
a council, officials have said.