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The Silent Epidemic Perspectives of High School Dropouts

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TLDR
In an effort to better understand the lives and circumstances of students who drop out of high school and to help ground the research in the stories and reflections of the former students themselves, a series of focus groups and a survey were conducted of young people aged 16-25 who identified themselves as high school dropouts in 25 different locations throughout the United States as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
T here is a high school dropout epidemic in America. Each year, almost one third of all public high school students – and nearly one half of all blacks, Hispanics and Native Americans – fail to graduate from public high school with their class. Many of these students abandon school with less than two years to complete their high school education. This tragic cycle has not substantially improved during the past few decades when education reform has been high on the public agenda. During this time, the public has been almost entirely unaware of the severity of the dropout problem due to inaccurate data. The consequences remain tragic. The decision to drop out is a dangerous one for the student. Dropouts are much more likely than their peers who graduate to be unemployed, living in poverty, receiving public assistance, in prison, on death row, unhealthy, divorced, and single parents with children who drop out from high school themselves. Our communities and nation also suffer from the dropout epidemic due to the loss of productive workers and the higher costs associated with increased incarceration, health care and social services. Given the clear detrimental economic and personal costs to them, why do young people drop out of high school in such large numbers? Almost every elementary and middle school student reports ambitions that include high school graduation and at least some college. Why are so many dreams cut short? And what steps should be taken to turn the tide? In an effort to better understand the lives and circumstances of students who drop out of high school and to help ground the research in the stories and reflections of the former students themselves, a series of focus groups and a survey were conducted of young people aged 16-25 who identified themselves as high school dropouts in 25 different locations throughout the United States. These interviews took place in large cities, suburbs and small towns with high dropout rates. A primary purpose of this report is to approach the dropout problem from a perspective that has not been much considered in past studies – that of the students themselves. These efforts were designed to paint a more in-depth picture of who these young people are, why they dropped out of high school, and what might have helped them complete their high school education. We wanted to give their stories and insights a voice, …

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Citations
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Engaging Out of School Males in Adult Education

Joni Schwartz
TL;DR: Bridgeland et al. as mentioned in this paper examined a community of practice reengaging one marginalized group of out of school minority males (16-25 years old) in learning.

Financial incentives for educational outcomes with homeless youth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the characteristics of homeless, unaccompanied youth to determine which subgroups of students pursued and obtained financial stipends as an incentive for satisfactory educational outcomes grades C and above, and found significant mean differences within the student's age, grade, and program enrollment status for both the percent of stipends earned and the length of program enrollment.

Bridging the Achievement Gap: An Exploratory Study of a Virginia School

Morris, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, a Virginia school was studied to determine the extent of the achievement gap between black and white students as well as what efforts were being taken in the school system to raise minority achievement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Keeping Track: How Schools Structure Inequality.

TL;DR: This provocative, carefully documented work shows how takingreflects the class and racial inequalities of American society and helps perpetuate them.
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Keeping Track: How Schools Structure Inequality

Jeannie Oakes
TL;DR: The tracking wars of the last twenty years as discussed by the authors have played a central role in the history of American education, in which the keeping hand has played a crucial role in many of the wars.
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TL;DR: This is the revolutionary account of the largest on-scene study of U.S. schools ever conducted, which provides compelling evidence that what the authors have will not do, and that only a thorough revolution can bring the reality of the school closer to its ideal.
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Does Compulsory School Attendance Affect Schooling and Earnings

TL;DR: This paper found that the season of birth is related to educational attainment and earnings, and that roughly 25 percent of potential dropouts remain in school because of compulsory schooling laws. But, they did not study the effect of compulsory attendance laws on educational attainment.
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