Austin American-Statesman

High school grad rate reaches record 83.2%

U.S. milestone, which includes all racial and ethnic groups, comes against a backdrop of slumping scores in math and reading.

- By Kevin Freking

The nation’s high school graduation rate has reached a record 83.2 percent, continuing a steady increase that shows improvemen­t across all racial and eth- nic groups, according to federal data released Monday.

President Barack Obama welcomed the higher rate as good news, but the gains come against a backdrop of decreasing scores on national math and reading tests.

Education Secretary John B. King Jr. acknowl- edged worries about sag- ging achievemen­t. “A higher graduation rate is meaning- ful progress, but certainly we share the concern that we have more work to do to make sure every student graduates ready for what’s next,” he said.

Obama visited Benjamin Banneker Academic High School, a magnet school in the District of Columbia, to tout the graduation rate for the 2014-15 school year. “More African-American and Latino students are graduating than ever,” he said.

Gains also were seen for disabled students and those from low-income families.

The District of Columbia made the most progress in the U.S. in 2014-15 compared to the previous year, improv- ing its graduation rate by 7 percentage points.

Obama applauded the high school for graduating all of its seniors. “It’s been a while since I did math, but 100 percent is good. You can’t do better than that,” Obama told the audience, which included King, former Education Secretary Arne Duncan, Mayor Muriel Bowser and former Secre- tary of State Colin Powell.

At the same time, he also warned the students they would need more than a high school diploma to succeed in today’s job market. He said that repetitive work done in factories or offices can now be done by machine. They would need critical think- ing skills.

“We live in a global economy,” Obama said. “And the best jobs are going to go to the people who are the best educated, whether in India or China, or anywhere in the world.”

The administra­tion said the graduation rate has increased by about 4 percentage points since the 201011 school year. Obama frequently cites the increase when he talks to groups about progress made during his presidency.

Despite the increase in the graduation rate, test scores are declining.

Last year, math scores for fourth- and eighth-graders dropped for the first time in 25 years on the 2015 National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress — also known as the Nation’s Report Card. Read- ing scores were not much better: flat for fourth-graders and lower for eighth-graders compared with 2013. Average scores on SAT and ACT college entrance exams also have shown declines.

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 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Barack Obama speaks to students, teachers and guests Monday at Benjamin Banneker Academic High School in Washington.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA / ASSOCIATED PRESS President Barack Obama speaks to students, teachers and guests Monday at Benjamin Banneker Academic High School in Washington.

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