High School Dropout

 chart 1
-Source: United States Census Bureau,
http://www.nces.ed.gov/pubs/digest97/d97t103.html

High School Dropouts

  • In October of 1996, 3.6 million, or 11.1% of young adults 16 to 24-years-old were dropouts -- i.e., they were not enrolled in a high school program and had not completed high school. Nearly a half million of them left high school between October of 1995 and 1996.

  • In 1996, 13% of black 16 to 24-year-olds were dropouts, compared to 7.3% of young whites and 29.4% of Hispanics. Despite their low dropout rates, whites account for 1.6 million or 44% of all dropouts. Hispanics comprise 36 % (or 1.3 million) of all dropouts, and blacks 16% (or 0.6 million).

  • Between 1960 and 1986, dropout percentages among young African Americans were cut in half, falling from 30% to 15% among men and from 27% to 14% among women. Since 1986, dropout rates have remained relatively stable or declined only modestly, not only among African Americans, but also in the total population.

  • Young adults from families in the lowest fifth of the income distribution were five times more likely to drop out than those with families in the top fifth (not illustrated on chart; data from National Center for Educational Statistics).


chart 2

-Source: United States Census Bureau, http://www.access.gpo.gov/eop/ca/charts/index.html

Drop-outs

  • The half -million young adults who dropped out from high school between October 1997 and October 1998 were much less likely to participate in the labor force (60.9%) than their peers who graduated from high school, but did not enroll in college (79.6%). Their unemployment rate was also much higher: 28.2% versus 18.4%. Among dropouts, women were less likely than men to participate in the labor force, and they were twice as likely to be unemployed.

  • From 1988 to 1997, 16-to-24-year-old black men were more than twice as likely as young white men to be both out of school and out of work. Except between 1990 and 1992, the ratio between young black women and young white women has been lower and declined to 21.4% for black women and 13.4% for white women. The 1997 percentage of black women out of school and out of work (21.4%) was a ten-year low and represented a sharp decline from the peak of 33.5% in 1991; the peak for young black men was 21.5% in 1992, and this declined only modestly to 19% in 1997.

  • Throughout most of the decade, Hispanic women had the highest percentage (33-35%) of youth not at school or work, but this rate fell greatly from 34.6% in 1995 to 25.6% in 1997. They remain twice as likely as young Hispanic men (13.6%) to be out of school and out of work.

 

References

 

 

Prepared by Cassandra Cantave and Roderick Harrison for the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. August 1999.

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Last updated: December 18, 2007


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