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Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Graduation rate of students who identify as two and more races at Carson Senior High School remained unchanged from previous school year

Test 14

The graduation rate of students who identify as two and more races at Carson Senior High School in the 2017-2018 school year remained unchanged from the previous school year’s graduation rate of 100 percent, according to the California Department of Education.

According to CDE data, graduation rates indicate an increase in disproportional academic performance between white, Black, Latino, and English learner students.

According to the National Centre for Education Statistics, in the 2017-2018 school year, of the 50 states where data was collected, students with disabilities were at the bottom of 4-year high school graduation rates by student group.

Angela Johnson, a research scientist at NWEA, says “taken together, prior research suggests that inequities exist in the quality of education experienced by current ELs and non-ELs and that these inequities explain achievement gaps in middle and early high school” in The Effects of English Learner Classification on High School Graduation and College Attendance.

Student Groups Ranked by Comparison to Previous Year Graduation Rate
RankingStudent GroupGraduation Rate 2017-2018Previous Year Graduation Rate 2016-2017
1American Indian or Alaska Native100100
1Students with Disabilities10089.1
1Two or More Races100100
4Black or African American96.592.3
5Hispanic or Latino93.798.2
6Filipino92.798.6
7Socioeconomically Disadvantaged91.495.6
8White9081.8
9Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander87.5100
10Asian83.371.4
11Foster Youth66.775
12English Learners36.450

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