Politics & Government

Brentwood, MRH Will Measure Graduation Rates Differently

Starting this year, all schools must measure their graduation rates using a new formula from the U.S. Department of Education.

and high schools have started calculating graduation rates using a new formula.

Last week, the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education released high school graduation rates calculated using the new method.

With the change in the way the rate is calculated, most districts in the state have a much lower rate than in the past.

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The change will allow Missouri to compare its performance to Kansas and Illinois, said Leigh Ann Grant-Engle, assistant commissioner for the Office of Data System Management.

States are required to report graduation rate data to the U.S. Department of Education under the No Child Left Behind legislation, but in the past, states calculated the rates using different methods.

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Now, the U.S. Department of Education is requiring all states to report the four-year graduation rate, which measures the percent of students who complete high school in four years.

Students who take longer to graduate or complete a GED aren't counted with their cohort group, and so the district doesn't "get credit" for them.

Currently, Missouri calculates the graduation rate by dividing the number of students who graduated in a given year by the number of graduates plus any dropouts from that class. So this rate would include students who took more than four years to graduate from high school.

, for example, had a 93.5 percent graduation rate in 2010-11 under the traditional calculation, with 72 graduates and five dropouts (72/77 = 93.5 percent). Under the new calculation, however, the rate for 2010-11 is listed as 91.3 percent.

At MRH, the old rate was 92.5 percent but the new one is 86.3 percent.

The four-year graduation rate for Missouri was 79.8 percent in the 2010-11 school year under the new calculation method.

Moving to a uniform calculation method allows states to be compared to one another more easily.

In a press release, the U.S. Department of Education calls the new calculation rate "more accurate" because it accounts for students who drop out or don't graduate in four years.

Grant-Engle, however, suggested that the new rate is not a "correction" of the old rate, adding that it's not appropriate to compare the two numbers. For now, the state intends to publish both rates.

"I believe they are just two different rates," she said. "There are many students that it's appropriate for them to take longer than four years to graduate. I do think (the new rate) is an important rate because it allows us to compare to other states accurately."

The new calculation may help state and district leaders understand characteristics of students who may take longer than four years to graduate.

"It's another way to look at students and see if there is anything we need to provide them to help them graduate in four years," Grant-Engle said.

But in smaller schools like Brentwood and MRH, if only one student doesn't graduate on time, the new rate can drop significantly.

“Where I know this is going to effect us is if a student is ill, misses a semester, comes back and continues to go to school but doesn’t graduate in a four-year period,” said Dr. Charles Penberthy, superintendent of Brentwood schools.

New "Four Year Graduation Rate" Calculation:

(Graduates / Total number of students in 9th Grade Cohort Group including transfers in, excluding transfers out) x 100

Old Calculation:

(Graduates / (9-12 Cohort Dropouts + Graduates)) x 100


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