By the numbers: High school dropouts
College Board says 857 drop out every hour of every school day
The numbers, the costs, the effects are astounding.
According to the College Board, 857 students drop out of high school every hour of every school day.
But that's only one statistic. Here are some other numbers that drive home the impact of the high school dropout problem in the U.S.
Dropout rates
About 1 in 4 high school students does not graduate from high school with his or her class.
Nearly 4 in 10 minority students do not graduate with their class.
Employment
Among adults over 25 without a high school diploma in 2011: 14.1 percent unemployment rate
With a high school diploma: 9.4 percent unemployment rate
Earnings
Median earnings for full time workers age 25 and older who did not have a high school diploma in 2008: $24,300
With a high school diploma: $33, 800
Economic Impact
What if half of the 1.3 million dropouts from the Class of 2010 had graduated from high school?
They could have generated:
$5.3 billion in increased earnings
$4.2 billion in increased spending
$6.7 billion in increased Gross National Product
$499 million in increased state tax revenue
Taxes and government spending
Turning just one student from dropout to graduate = more than $200,000 in higher tax revenues and lower government expenditures over his or her lifetime.
Graduating half of one class of dropouts = taxpayer savings of $45 billion in that year.
Poverty and crime
Dropouts make up nearly half the heads of households on welfare.
High school dropouts commit about 75 percent of crimes in the U.S.
Why they drop out
Nearly half of students who drop out do it because they say their classes "aren't interesting."
About 43 percent say they quit because they had too many absences and felt they couldn't catch up.
About 38 percent say they had "too much freedom and not enough rules."
About 35 percent quit because they were failing.
How to fix the problem?
About 81 percent of students who dropped out said they would like to see schools offer "real world" learning opportunities.
Sources: The College Board, America's Promise, Bureau of Labor Statistics, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
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