Top Banner
Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate [email protected] 304-558-3199
11

Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate [email protected] 304-558-3199.

Dec 31, 2015

Download

Documents

Melissa Webb
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

Shelly DeBerryWest Virginia Department of Education

Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate

[email protected]

Page 2: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

“Every school-day in America, 171 school buses loaded with children leave school never to return. That is our daily dropout rate.”

(National Center for Education Statistics, 2004. Dropout Rates in the United States: 2001)

Approximately, 7000 students are expected to dropout of school in West

Virginia this year.

Education Week Diplomas Count 20102

Page 3: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

How does WV Rate?

• In 2006, West Virginia had a teen pregnancy rate of 44.9 per 1,000 teenage girls, which placed the state 16th in the nation.

• Birth rates for young teenagers aged 15–17 declined in 31 states during 2007–2009

• Birth rates increased significantly for only one state from 2007 through 2009, West Virginia, by 17 percent.

NCHS Data Brief No. 58 February 2011 ■ ■

Page 4: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

What’s the Cost?

• Teen pregnancies cost the nation about $9.1 billion a year, according to the CDC.

• Other Cost of Dropouts

Page 5: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

Students Who Earn More Learn More

Page 6: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

Long Term Effects

Over the course of his or her lifetime, a high school dropout earns, on average, about $260,000 less than a high school graduate.

6

Page 7: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

Increasing the graduation rate and college matriculation of male students in the United States by just 5 percent could lead to combined savings and revenue of almost $8 billion each year by reducing crime-related costs.

7

Page 8: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

If the United States‘ likely dropouts from the Class of 2006 had graduated, the nation could have saved more than $17 billion in Medicaid and expenditures for uninsured health care over the course of those young people‘s lifetimes.

8

Page 9: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

Correlations with Dropping out of School

70 % of young women who gave birth within 4 years of starting high school also left before graduating.

They represent 32.8 % of dropouts ands 18.7% of all student enrolled in school.

70% of students who had substantiated case of abuse and neglect during the high school years, who had a foster care placement, or who had given birth within four years of starting high school, dropped out in Philadelphia.

(Neild Y Balfanz, 2006)

Page 10: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

National Dropout Prevention Center/Network 10

Teen Pregnancy Teen girls in the bottom 20% of basic reading and math

skills are five times more likely to become mothers over a two-year high school period than teen girls in the top 20%

Male and female students with low academic achievement are twice as likely to become parents by their senior year of high school compared to students with high academic achievement.

(Alliance for Excellent Education, 2003)

Page 11: Shelly DeBerry West Virginia Department of Education Office of School Improvement Student Success Advocate sdeberry@access.k12.wv.us 304-558-3199.

National Dropout Prevention Center/Network 11

Children of Teenagers

• More likely to repeat grades• Do worse on standardized tests• Less likely to complete high school

(Reitzi, 2005)