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"By not making these numbers pie-in-the-sky, I think we have a better chance," Peiffer said. Graduation rates take longer to improve than test scores, because a child's educational experience must be transformed over a period of years, Peiffer said. The U.S. was slow to realize it was facing a dropout crisis. For years, researchers reported dropouts as the number of kids who quit school in 12th grade, failing to capture those who left high school earlier. States and schools clouded the picture by using different methods to keep track of students who graduated, transferred or dropped out.
Then came the 2002 No Child Left Behind law, with its requirement that states meet graduation goals. In 2005, the nation's governors made a pact to adopt a common system of tracking graduation rates. Now the federal government is poised to raise the bar on graduation rates. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings is expected to issue new rules next week that will force states to use the common tracking system and will judge schools not only on graduation rates, but on the percentage of black and Hispanic students who graduate, too. Among minority students, more than one in three students drop out of school. Spellings proposed the new rules earlier this year. Final rules may differ somewhat, but Spellings said earlier that states would be required in most cases to count graduates as students who leave high school on time and with a regular diploma. Critics have worried that by judging test scores more heavily and graduation less so, No Child Left Behind encouraged schools to push weak students out. Balfanz, the Johns Hopkins researcher, said the dropout problem is driven by "dropout factories"
-- schools in poor communities where kids face challenges inside and outside the classroom. He said the government could make a big dent in the dropout problem by plowing more money
-- and firm guidance on how to spend it -- into those schools. More resources are desperately needed, said Mel Riddle, who retired in July as principal of T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Va. "The world's changed; we have to change to meet those demands," said Riddle, now an official of the National Association of Secondary School Principals. "To think we can do it in the same way, with the same resources, is not realistic." ___ On the Net: Education Trust: http://www.edtrust.org/
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