Schools

Coronado Unified Graduation Rate Rises, Dropouts Decline

Both numbers track far ahead of the county and state. Meanwhile, statewide more students are graduating within four years.

An increasing percentage of California students are graduating within four years of entering high school, according to new state data released Wednesday.

“It's heading in the right direction,” State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson said on a conference call announcing the high school graduation and dropout rates for the Class of 2011.

This is the second year the state's rates have been based on a state data system—CALPADS—that tracks individual students over their academic careers. Previous systems relied on group estimates.

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The new data shows that 76.3 percent of California high school students graduated within four years in 2011, up 1.5 percent from the previous class that was the first to use CALPADS.

Coronado Unified School District continues to far exceed state averages, with a graduation rate of just under 98 percent.

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About 78 percent of San Diego County high school students graduate within four years.

Torlakson said though the numbers are not where state officials would like them to be ultimately, they are “good news” in the face of budget turmoil and uncertainty, and related problems, such as crowded classrooms, a shorter school year and far fewer summer school classes.

"We'd like to see the numbers climb higher and faster," Torlakson said.


10-11 Grad 10-11 Dropout  09-10 Grad 09-10 Dropout

Coronado High

97.9% 1.8% 93.9% 3.2%




District 96.6%
2.1%
93.7%
3.5%





State 76.3% 14.4% 74.8% 16.6%



County 77.5% 10.9% 75.2% 13.2% San Diego Unified 83.7% 5.9% 80.9% 8.4%

The state's dropout rate, too, is headed in the right direction, Torlakson said, dropping just over 2 percent to 14.4 percent in the Class of 2011.

“Our research shows that chronic absence from school, even as early as kindergarten, is a strong indicator of whether a child will drop out of school later,” Torlakson said in a statement. “The dropout rate shows there’s still much work to be done, particularly to address the needs of disadvantaged and minority students.” 

About one out of 10 San Diego County high school students drop out; at Coronado High the number is less than 2 percent, an improvement from a year ago.

The dropout rate reflects students who are no longer enrolled in California schools and who are not known to have transferred out of state.

With CALPADS, state education officials are able to track students as they move throughout the state—whether or not they let their original home school know they are leaving. But if students leave the state without notifying their last in-state school, they can be shown as a dropout.

Students who are still enrolled in school beyond four years, pursuing a GED or in a non-diploma special education program, are not included as dropouts.


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