Schools

Peeking At Dropout & Grad Rates For Las Lomas & Northgate

At Las Lomas High, the graduation rate was down and the dropout rate was up.

Northgate bucked the trend in other high schools in the Mt. Diablo Unified School District by lowering its 2012 dropout rate.

At Las Lomas High, the graduation rate was down and the dropout rate was up.

At Las Lomas, the graduation rate was 95.0 percent in 2012, dropping from 98.3 percent  the year before. The dropout rate was 2.8 percent in 2012, up from 0.8 percent the year before.

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Patch has a call in to Las Lomas High seeking a comment on the trends.

At Northgate High, the graduation rate was 96.2 percent in 2012, up from 94.8 in 2011. The dropout rate was 2.5 percent, down from 4.3 percent the year before. The percentages are much better than the averages for the MDUSD.

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Figures released this week by the state superintendent's office show that overall the MDUSD's graduation rate last year was 81.1 percent, above the state average of 78.5 percent.

The dropout rate for the district, however, was listed as 14.5 percent. That was up from 11.7 percent in 2011 and also above this year's 13.2 percent statewide average. The district figures include continuation schools and other campuses that are not listed individually in the superintendent's report.

There are also a small percentage of students who are not counted as either graduates or dropouts because they are still in school or passed the GED or are special education students.

The district's five main high schools all had graduation rates above the state average.

Mt. Diablo High and Ygnacio Valley High were the lowest at slightly above 81 percent.

Northgate High was the highest at 96.2 percent. College Park High was also above 90 percent while Concord High was slightly below that level.

Clayton Valley Charter High was part of the Mt. Diablo district in 2011, but it is now under the Contra Costa County Office of Education.

In 2011, their graduation rate was 94.4 percent and in 2012 it was 83.5 percent. The dropout rate also went from 4.4 percent in 2011 to 10.1 percent last year. The numbers for the two years, however, on based on different criteria and aren't comparable.

The graduation rate at the district five main high schools were relatively the same from year to year.

However, the dropout rate increased at College Park, Concord, Mt. Diablo and Ygnacio Valley.

The rate at both Mt. Diablo and Ygnacio Valley was above the state average.

High School 2012 Graduation 2011 Rate 2012 Dropout 2011 Rate College Park      90.6     92.6     8.2     4.2 Concord      89.4     88.7     7.5     6.1 Horizon Alternative      77.7     72.6     20     19 Mt. Diablo      81.5     82.3     15.6     14.4 Northgate      96.2     94.8     2.5     4.3 Ygnacio Valley      81.6     80.1     17.7     15.4 State Average      78.5     77.1     13.2     14.7

State statistics

Overall, California's graduation rates rose while dropout rates declined.

The state superintendent's office reported 78.5 percent of students who started high school in 2008-2009 graduated last year. That was up 1.4 percentage points from the year before.

Among African-American students, 65.7 percent graduated with their class in 2012, up 2.9 points from the year before.

Among Hispanic students, 73.2 percent graduated in 2012, up 1.8 points from the year before.

There was a corresponding drop in the state's dropout rate.

The superintendent's office reported 13.2 percent of students who began high school in 2008-2009 dropped out. That was down 1.5 percentage points from the year before.

The dropout rate among African-American students dropped 3.1 points to 22.2 percent. Among Hispanic students, the dropout rate fell 2.1 points to 16.2 percent.

Another 8.3 percent of students were labeled as neither dropouts nor graduates.

State Superintendent Tom Torlakson said while the trend is positive, California schools still need to do more. He said he'd like to see the graduation rate top 80 percent in the near future and then reach 90 percent by 2020.

He commended local school officials for improving education despite budget cuts the past few years and the fact California is 49th in the nation in education funding.

"As I travel up and down the state, I see great things happening in California schools," said Torlakson.


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