March 12, 2009 1:06 PM

12 States Make Gains In Graduation Rates

(AP)  The national high school graduation rate remained flat at about 75 percent between 2002 and 2006, while a dozen states made substantial gains, according to a new report by researchers at Johns Hopkins University.

The report, released Thursday by the Baltimore University's Everyone Graduates Center, found the largest gain was in Tennessee, where the rate rose from 61 percent to 72 percent. New York's rate increased from 64 percent to 67 percent.

Those two states produced the greatest number of additional graduates, with roughly 8,000 more students in each earning high school diplomas in 2006, said the center, which tries to develop strategies to help students graduate.

The Tennessee Department of Education said Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen had put a lot more funding toward students considered at risk and students for whom English is a second language.

"I have to give a lot of credit to the teachers and principals in the local districts because without them you would not see these results," department spokeswoman Rachel Woods said.

Graduation rates increased by 6.8 percentage in Delaware (to 76 percent) and Kentucky (to 78 percent). Rounding out the list of states with substantial gains were South Dakota, Arkansas, Alabama, North Carolina, Hawaii, Missouri, Nebraska and New Hampshire.

The report comes just days after President Barack Obama's first major speech on education, in which he discussed reducing the high school dropout rate and pushing states to adopt more rigorous academic standards.

"One can look at the national data and get kind of depressed and think we're not improving, but we need to look at the fact that there are 12 states that did make significant improvements," said Robert Balfanz, co-director of the Everyone Graduates Center. "But we're still clearly not putting enough resources and know-how behind this critical national problem."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by dangyankee69 March 12, 2009 4:39 PM EDT
Wow that was fast! He made that speach days ago and already the graduation rates are up. Now that's change you can really sink your teeth into.
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by platteman March 12, 2009 2:41 PM EDT
Just watch Jay Leno and his "Jay walking" and you will realize just how stupid the high school graduates really are. Some of these people are actually in college and are to be the future leaders of the country. It is truly sad to see what has been taught.

When people get their news from late night talk show hosts, you understand how undereducated the people really are.
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by fizzie319 March 12, 2009 1:39 PM EDT
While 12 states making some improvements is most definitely a good thing, now its time to address another problem:

Colleges are having greater re education rates of recent high school graduates.

Troubleshooter25 is right, High school students can regurgitate the information that they are given. In college, some courses require information regurgitation, but most require critical thinking and applying knowledge that you know, particularly in Writing 123, Writing 122, Political Science, and Sociology. And lets face it, colleges do not administer standardized tests.
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