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More Than Half of California鈥檚 High School Grads Still Don鈥檛 Meet Minimum Requirements for the State鈥檚 Own Public Universities

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Fewer than half of California鈥檚 high school graduates last year met the minimum requirements for the state鈥檚 public universities, according to data released Thursday by the state Department of Education.

That鈥檚 despite what the department calls a 鈥渟ignificant upward trend鈥 in graduation rates this decade.

But that upward trend ended with Thursday鈥檚 data release. The state鈥檚 grad rate for 2017 dropped 1 percentage point because an by the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Office of Inspector General found California did not calculate its rates according to federal requirements.

Under the new calculation, the state grad rate dropped from 83.8 percent in 2016 to 82.7 percent in 2017. Graduation rates in Los Angeles Unified, the state鈥檚 largest school district, dropped from 77.3 percent to 76.1 percent. However, LA Unified noted later Thursday that the state had not counted the district鈥檚 affiliated charter schools, which are operated by the district, and thus its adjusted graduation rate for 2017 was 76.8 percent.

A spokesman for the department, however, said this year鈥檚 numbers should not be compared to the old ones because they were compiled with different calculations.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e totally different calculations that include different students,鈥 said department spokesman Scott Rourke.

The new methodology means three student groups are not counted in the grad rates:

鈼徛students who earn an adult education diploma;

鈼徛students who pass the high school proficiency exam, which is similar to the GED; and

鈼徛students who leave high school and go to an adult education program, or enroll in a high school diploma program at a community college, and then graduate.

Going forward, California will calculate its grad rates in this new way, but it won鈥檛 retroactively change previous years鈥 rates, even though the federal audit described the numbers as unreliable and recommended that they be reworked.

While fewer than half the 2017 graduates met the requirements to apply to the state鈥檚 public universities, that number has been rising. In 2013, only 39.4 percent of graduates were eligible; in 2016, 45.4 percent were, and in 2017, 46.8 percent were. To qualify for state universities, students must complete a set of with a C or better.

The department capped its news release on the new graduation rates by pointing out that this year鈥檚 grad rates at non-charter schools are higher than those for charter schools, once alternative schools are factored out.

While graduation rates at traditional schools top those at charter schools 鈥 91.5 percent, compared with 82 percent 鈥 a greater percentage of students leave charter schools ready to enter state universities. At traditional schools, 47 percent graduated meeting state university requirements. Just over 50 percent of charter school graduates met those requirements.

鈥淭his is the latest in an endless series of wake-up calls to Sacramento, where inertia continues to prevent our public schools from meaningfully improving,鈥 Bill Lucia, president of the advocacy group EdVoice, said in a statement. 鈥淭hese numbers are alarmingly low, especially for our state鈥檚 most vulnerable students. Only half of California鈥檚 foster students graduate from high school. In San Francisco County, just over half of African-American students 鈥 56.4 percent 鈥 graduate. In L.A. County, less than two-thirds of English learners 鈥 62.1 percent 鈥 graduate. Those are unacceptably poor odds for kids enrolled in California public schools. The state is clearly failing its most vulnerable children. All children deserve public schools that work.鈥

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