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Re: Jersey City high-school graduation rate declines to 67 percent
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Just can't stay away
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The various graduation rates by school, etc start on page 9
http://www.jcboe.org/boe2013/images/p ... _Presentation_Nov_v13.pdf
Posted on: 2012/12/11 2:36
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Jersey City high-school graduation rate declines to 67 percent
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Home away from home
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Jersey City high-school graduation rate declines to 67 percent
By Terrence T. McDonald/The Jersey Journal on December 10, 2012 Jersey City?s high-school graduation rate was 67 percent for the 2011-12 school year, a rate more than two points lower than it was the previous year. State education officials last week released results from various statewide student exams, including the High School Proficiency Assessment. Statewide, the graduation rate increased to 86 percent, up three points from the previous year. Jersey City schools chief Marcia V. Lyles said in a statement that the 29,000-student district is ?concerned,? but mindful that graduation rates ?are not a result of a one-year event or effort.? "We are continuing to examine and implement practices and programs that we believe will improve our students' outcomes in the future,? Lyles said. Last month, Lyles gave a presentation to the school board regarding the district?s academic progress, and she cited the 67 percent graduation rate. Of the students who don?t graduate, 13 percent drop out entirely, while the others transfer out or graduate later than they should, according to Lyles. ?That 13 percent is the number we must address,? she said then. The district has six high schools. The graduation rate at McNair Academic High School was the highest, at 99 percent. Liberty High School came in at 81 percent, Ferris High School at 73 percent and Dickinson High School at 69 percent. The lowest graduation rates in the district were recorded at Snyder High School (51 percent) and Lincoln High School (50 percent). State officials calculate the graduation rates using a new, federally mandated methodology that the state says is ?more thorough? and provides a ?more accurate? accounting of the number of students who graduate from high school. ?The results for schools undergoing intensive turnarounds this year are particularly very encouraging, showing that while our achievement gaps across the state are persistent and unacceptably high, we can close them with dedicated support and interventions,? state Education Commissioner Chris Cerf said in a statement. In other urban districts, Camden?s graduation rate slid seven points to 49 percent, Newark?s rose the same amount to 69 percent and Paterson?s rose two points to 66 percent. http://www.nj.com/hudson/index.ssf/20 ... _gradua.html#incart_river
Posted on: 2012/12/11 0:33
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