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Montgomery baffled by students quitting school

By: Leah Fabel
Examiner Staff Writer
October 27, 2009

Trading in on a diploma
Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Jerry Weast said in a memo released Monday that falling graduation rates and rising dropout numbers were "discouraging" and defied easy solutions.

Weast wrote that the graduation rates of black and Hispanic students, which have decreased at faster rates than their white and Asian peers, were especially disheartening.

Despite "myriad strategies" to keep students in school, "we continue to lose students, and there appear to be as many unique sets of factors and facts as there are students who drop out," Weast said.

The graduation rate fell to about 87 percent in 2009, down from a recent peak of nearly 93 percent in 2003. As a result, the school system has fallen to 11th best at graduation among the state's 24 school systems, down from second place in the early part of the decade.

The percentage of students who dropped out of school increased to nearly 3 percent in 2009, up from less than 2 percent as recently as 2005. As a result, Montgomery's ranking among Maryland's districts fell to 14th place, from first place in 2002.

Diego Uriburu, deputy executive director of advocacy group Identity, works closely with Montgomery schools on behalf of the county's growing population of Hispanic residents. In 2009, about 5 percent of Hispanic students dropped out, more than any other racial group in the county.

Uriburu said that only about 50 percent of Hispanic students feel as though they're succeeding in the schools. For the rest, he's working with the county's new Latino Youth Collaborative to offer solutions.

"For some of the youth whose path did not involve college -- especially those who had had interrupted education in the past, they would've benefited from more vocational offerings," Uriburu said.

lfabel@washingtonexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Bugaduga

Oct 27, 2009

In Latin America, finishing 8th grade is considered a full education and having a baby at age 16 is considered to be a good thing. These are cultural factors that are just as hard to change as someone's religion. Don't expect to see anything change in the Latino population anytime this century.

 

NJ

Oct 27, 2009

Encourage more Illegals to join our schools and deprive our tax paying citizens children to put up with sub standard education. The likes of Ike Leggett is a total disgrace to MoCo. Time for him to go. We need to take back our county and keep it safe for our kids. Ike Leggett go to Holy Cross hospital and see why kids are dropping out of school.

 

Seven Keys

Oct 27, 2009

How are those "Seven Keys to College Readiness" working out for these kids? Not so well, it seems. MCPS should stop forcing a "one size fits all" curriculum on everyone. And why is Harvard publishing a vanity book on MCPS if our graduation rate is dropping like a rock?

 

Ruonac

Oct 27, 2009

Montgomery County schools are becoming more and more like Los Angeles schools. Quality going down, cost going up, crime and safety issues, and filled with illegal aliens. Give it a couple more years and most of the MCPS schools won't be a place that any American will set foot in.

 

JohnRice

Oct 27, 2009

I suspect that the cause of the relative percentage increase in the number of Hispanics dropping out of school is due to the increased number enrolled at the beginning of each year. The causes of their leaving school have likely remained the same.
Additionally those who are here illegally may not enjoy the spotlight cast upon them by being enrolled in school.
What ever happened to the celebration of diversity?

 


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