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Central Alameda News

Friday, November 15, 2024

White student group had a unchanged graduation rate in Castro Valley Unified during 2017-2018

Test 17

The White student group in the Castro Valley Unified School District had a unchanged graduation rate, 96.7 percent, than the overall district's rate of 97.1 percent for the 2017-2018 school year, 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-learning students.

According to the National Centre for Education Statistics, in 2019 American Indian and Alaska Native students were the most at risk of dropping out.

Angela Johnson, a research scientist at NWEA, says “taken together, prior research suggests that inequities exist in the quality of education experienced by current ELsand 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 Group Ranked by Comparison to Statewide Graduation Rate (2017-2018)
RankStudent GroupStudent Group Graduation RateStatewide Graduation Rate
1Asian98.894.9
2Filipino97.493.5
3White96.792.1
4Socioeconomically Disadvantaged95.488.6
4Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander83.388.6
6Hispanic or Latino9786.5
7American Indian or Alaska Native5082.8
8Black or African American94.682.2
9Foster Youth10074.1
10Students with Disabilities82.567.1
11English Learners72.256.7

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