District of Columbia Public Schools | 1200 First Street, NE | Washington, DC 20002 | T 202.442.5885 | F 202.442.5026 | dcps.dc.gov SY2017-18 Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rates (ACGR) November 2018
District of Columbia Public Schools | 1200 First Street, NE | Washington, DC 20002 | T 202.442.5885 | F 202.442.5026 | dcps.dc.gov
SY2017-18 Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rates (ACGR)
November 2018
Our vision for high school in DCPS is one where students feel…
SY2017-18 Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rates
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Loved
Challenged
Prepared
Personalized graduation and post-secondary planning support
Rigorous and relevant learning experiences inside and outside the classroom
Opportunities to cultivate independence, self-awareness, and self-sufficiency
…to positively influence society and thrive in life.
Our Commitment
• Maintain high expectations for all students and ensure all graduates feel confident they have earned their diploma
• Empower our students and families on their path to graduation with the supports they need to be successful
• Provide clear and transparent policies with rigorous monitoring systems
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SY2017-18 Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rates
Our Commitment: Maintain high expectations for all students and ensure all graduates feel confident they have earned their diploma.
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School Year 2017-2018 Actions School Year 2018-2019 Actions
✓ Monitored the graduation status of every student
✓ Conducted manual review of individual student transcripts for all students in the 2018 cohort
✓ Enhanced graduation verification process to include school-level and central office transcript review and data certification
• One-on-one academic planning conferences with every high school student in the fall and spring
• Implemented new scheduling process to ensure students are appropriately mapped to requirements
• Enhanced central office oversight and monitoring
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School Year 2017-2018 Actions School Year 2018-2019 Actions
✓ Held individual meetings with students, families, and counselors
✓ Hosted resource fairs at all nine comprehensive high schools
✓ Increased communication for students and families
✓ Created new original credit courses in second semester and summer school
• Launched summer bridge engagements to foster personal connections between rising 9th graders and their receiving high schools
• Introduced graduation and post-secondary planning in an online platform (Naviance) for students, families, and staff with a new graduation profile that provides an intuitive way to review student data and progress
• Redesigned and launched credit recovery programming
Our Commitment: Empower our students and families on their path to graduation with the supports they need to be successful.
Our Commitment: Provide clear and transparent policies with rigorous monitoring systems.
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School Year 2017-2018 Actions School Year 2018-2019 Actions
✓ Implemented system improvements to support compliance with grading and attendance policies
✓ Provided ongoing training, resources, and technical assistance to key staff on graduation-related policies
• Created Pre-K to Graduation: A Policy Guide for Families and policy implementation protocols for staff
• Ensured school and central office staff completed policy and systems training
• Launched a monitoring framework to ensure adherence to requirements
• Continued system updates to support data quality and ensure compliance
DCPS 2018 4-Year ACGR – Key Takeaways
▪ DCPS remains committed to regaining the public’s trust. We have worked diligently to build transparent and strong systems, so that students, families, and the community are confident in DCPS.
▪ While we expected the School Year 2017-2018 graduation rate to decrease, we are proud of the 2,273 graduates (68.6%) who met our standards of excellence. We are thankful for the school leaders, staff, and students who worked hard over last spring and summer to get us where we are today.
▪ There is much more work to do and DCPS remains focused on ensuring students and families understand the path to graduation.
▪ We will also continue to focus on strategic school supports and implementing our attendance, promotion, grading, and graduation policies with fidelity, so that our schools and students have what they need to be successful.
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The 4-Year Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rate (ACGR) measures the percent of 9th graders who graduate within four years.
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ACGR is calculated by following a cohort of rising 9th grade students to determine the percentage that receive a regular diploma within 4 years (including students who graduate early).
Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rate
Grads within 4 years
(Grads within 4 years + non-grads*) – (Transfer students who produce valid documentation)
*Non-grads include:• Students who withdraw without subsequent enrollment (Any student who transfers and produces valid documentation of enrollment in another degree-granting school will be removed from the cohort).• Students who are still enrolled and did not graduate in 4 years.• Students who receive all other types of diploma/certificate other than a traditional diploma (GED, SPED certificates, etc.).
53.0% 53.6%56.5% 57.6%
64.4%69.0%
73.2%68.6%
0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
90.0%
100.0%
2011(n =4001)
2012(n =3990)
2013(n =3608)
2014(n =3627)
2015(n =3454)
2016(n =3343)
2017(n =3258)
2018(n =3311)
4-Y
ear
Gra
du
atio
n R
ate
Cohort Year
DCPS Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rates
+.6% +2.9% +1.1% +6.8% +4.6% +4.2% -4.6%
The 2018 4-Year Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rate is 68.6% compared to 73.2% in 2017.
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The graduation rate is lower in 2018 compared to 2017 for most high schools.
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59%64%
60%
70%
76% 79%
60%
90%
83%
100%
88%
93% 96% 95%98%
18% 19%
35%
58%
50%
55%58%
56%
86%82%
60%
88%
76%
100%
84%
100%96% 98% 99%
18% 18%22%
35%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
4-Year ACGR Trends 2017-2018, All High Schools
2017 2018
Comprehensive Application
District Rate: 68.6%
Opportunity
The majority of the students in the ACGR cohort are students of color.
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69.7%
20.0%
6.6%2.0%
1.6%0.2%
Racial Composition of 2018 ACGR Cohort
Black or African American Hispanic or Latino White Asian Multiracial Other
The graduation rate for students of color was lower in 2018 compared to 2017.
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82%
72% 71%
94%
84%
52%
62%
79%
68%
88%
68% 61%
92% 90%
46%
52%
75%
62%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
4-Year ACGR Trends 2017-2018, Districtwide Subgroups
2017 2018
District Rate: 68.6%
n sizes presented are for the 2018 cohort.
*Identifies students who were ever identified as a student with a disability or English learner while in high school.
Graduation Progress Since June 2018
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DCPS improved upon its June estimated graduation rate through summer graduates and OSSE’s cohort verification process.
▪ DCPS estimated that 59% of the class of 2018 had graduated in June prior to summer school.
▪ This summer:
• 186 students in the 4-year cohort graduated in August. This increased the graduation rate by 5.2 percentage points.
• 236 students were removed from the overall cohort due to verification that they had transferred to another degree-granting LEA, which decreased the cohort size, therefore raising the graduate rate 4.6 percentage points.
▪ The final DCPS graduation rate was 68.6%.
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June Graduates* (includes 2-year, 3-year
and mid-year grads)
August Graduates
Removals from Cohort**
Final
Graduates 2087 186 2273Non-Graduates 1460 1038
Total Cohort 3547 -236 3311Graduation Rate 58.8% +5.2% +4.6% 68.6%
*June estimate included 2,096 graduates but OSSE determined 9 graduates were in a different cohort year based on records from other LEAs.
**As of June, DCPS estimated that 426 students from the 2018 cohort transferred to another LEA, state cohort or were in a different cohort year.
DCPS had fewer graduates in June 2018 compared to the prior year, but more graduates in August.
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*Numbers exclude 4 mid-year graduates from 2018 and 1 2-year graduate from 2016 that belongs to the 2018 cohort.
30
2208
14658
2024
186
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3-Year Grads June Grads August Grads
Overall 4-Year Cohort Graduates by Date of Graduation*
2017 2018
In SY2017-18, chronic absence among graduates decreased by nearly 10 percentage points.
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78.4%69.8%
21.6%30.2%
0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
90.0%
100.0%
2017 (n = 2308) 2018 (n = 2177)
Chronic Absence for Graduates
Chronic Absence 90+ Attendance
Note: Attendance is based on the most recent school year (SY2016-2017 for 2017 grads and SY2017-2018 for 2018
grads). Attendance is not available for all graduates in those years due to some graduates earning their diplomas early
and because DCPS does not capture attendance of non-public school graduates.
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DCPS is committed to promoting equity and excellence in all of our schools.
DCPS is and will always be a district for all students.
Appendix
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4-Year ACGR Cohorts by Year
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2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Transfer/Withdrawn Students 229 319 445 592 680 679 765 725
Number of Documents Accepted 16 70 158 255 410 497 565 632
% of Eligible Students Removed 7% 22% 36% 43% 60% 73% 74% 87%
Graduation Rate if All Removed 60% 62% 65% 69% 72% 75% 78% 71%
4-Year ACGR Cohort 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
Cohort 4,001 3,990 3,608 3,627 3,454 3,343 3,258 3,311
Grads 2,120 2,137 2,038 2,088 2,223 2,306 2,385 2,273
Non-Grads 1,881 1,853 1,570 1,539 1,231 1,037 873 1,038
4-Year Graduation Rate 53% 54% 56% 58% 64% 69% 73% 69%
4-Year ACGR Cohorts by Year
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Cohort Size # Grads (in cohort)
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018* 2018*Comprehensive
450 Anacostia HS 321 345 278 293 233 224 163 154 77
452 Ballou HS 397 384 293 265 239 267 251 276 152
454 Cardozo EC 278 216 168 180 162 201 199 203 118
455 Coolidge HS 209 220 180 174 123 132 98 94 53
467 Dunbar HS 244 239 197 249 183 171 194 175 150
457 Eastern HS 194 26 281 278 248 202 166
459 Roosevelt HS 239 272 182 208 169 173 171 196 118
463 Wilson HS 404 384 459 466 499 424 427 443 392
464 H.D. Woodson HS 224 254 233 292 217 192 185 158 120Application
402 Benjamin Banneker HS 89 87 73 102 94 72 96 103 103
442 Columbia Heights EC (CHEC) 215 201 234 222 230 222 282 249 210
471 Ellington School of the Arts 96 105 121 122 132 140 123 118 118
458 McKinley Technology HS 174 181 152 143 144 153 124 142 137
478 Phelps ACE HS 93 89 70 43 47 91 66 65
466 School Without Walls HS 112 120 140 124 149 134 150 156 154Opportunity Academies
462 Ballou STAY 181 153 108 104 108 87 79 95 17
884 Luke Moore Alternative HS 141 165 155 127 138 160 139 159 35
456 Roosevelt STAY 21 14 16 33 45 49 52 143 26
474 Washington Metropolitan HS 86 125 104 85 75 60 75 26
*There were 104 students in the cohort enrolled in non-public schools. There were 36 graduates from the 104 non-public students.