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Learn about Oregon's cohort graduation rates and how they are calculated. Discover why this method is used and how it compares to rates in other states. Also, find out about dropout rates and the inclusion of "other completers" in the cohort data.
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How Does Oregon Report Graduation Rates? • Cohort Graduation Rate • This year’s release reports on graduation rates for students who first entered high school in 2006-07 (for the 4-year rate) and 2005-06 (for the 5-year rate).
How Does the Cohort Rate Work? • Follows a group (or cohort) of students throughout high school – adjusted for students who move in and out of the system • Students who receive a modified diploma, GED, adult high school diploma, or alternative certificate are counted as non-graduates • Schools may meet graduation requirements by either: • Graduating 65% of students within 4 years • Graduating 70% of students within 5 years
How is the Cohort Rate Calculated? • Four-year cohort graduation rate = • number of students in the adjusted cohort that • earn a regular high school diploma by August 2010 • ___________________________________________________ • Number of first-time 9th graders in 2006-07 • adjusted for transfers in and out • Five-year cohort graduation rate = • number of students in the adjusted cohort that • earn a regular high school diploma by August 2010 • ___________________________________________________ • Number of first-time 9th graders in 2005-06 • adjusted for transfers in and out
Why Do We Look At Graduation Rates This Way? • In the past, Oregon used a different calculation to determine graduation rates. Last year, we transitioned from that previous rate (NCES) to the Cohort Rate. • Reasons for the change: • Federal requirement for all states starting with 2011-12 AYP report • A more uniform and accurate measure of high school graduation • Allows us to clearly see where each student is ending up after 4 and 5 years in high school
Comparing to Other States • Can Oregon’s cohort rate be compared to other state’s graduations rate? • Not this year as states are still in various stages of implementation • e.g. some states do not currently require their special education students to meet cohort graduation targets • Next year, the cohort graduation rate will be the common standard used by every state and there will be a higher degree of comparability.
2009-10 Cohort Graduation RatesEmbargoed until Tuesday, April 26, 9 AM
Dropout Rates • The dropout rate is the number of students who drop out of school (grades 9-12) in a given year divided by the total number of students enrolled that year • A dropout is defined as an individual who has withdrawn from school and has not received a regular diploma, modified diploma, extended diploma, adult high school diploma, alternative certificate, or GED • Students who are deceased, in home school, enrolled in an approved alternative education program, or temporarily absent from school are not considered dropouts
The dropout rate is not the inverse of the graduation rate • In addition to graduates and dropouts, the cohort includes information on “other completers.” These are students who: received a GED, a modified diploma or alternative certificate, an adult high school diploma from a community college, are enrolled in an alternative school, or are still enrolled and taking longer than four years (or longer than 5 years in the case of the 5-year rate) to graduate. • “Other Completers” are not counted as a graduates and do lower the graduation rate, but they are not dropouts.