For Immediate Release: March
14, 2007
Senate Passes Bill to Clarify State
Graduation Rates, Establish Goal of
100 Percent
The
full Senate has approved a measure to
set a graduation goal of 100 percent
for Oklahoma high school students. Senate
Bill 985, by Sen. Kathleen
Wilcoxson, would also establish
guidelines to give a more accurate picture
of graduation rates that will enable
an “apples to apples” comparison
with other states.
“Right now, the stated goal for
Oklahoma is a graduation rate of 68
percent—that’s the goal
filed as required under ‘No Child
Left Behind’ and it will remain
in effect through 2014,” said
Wilcoxson, R-Oklahoma City. “Senate
Bill 985 sets the goal at 100 percent
by that year. We expect all high school
students to graduate.”
The legislation also would set new guidelines
for determining actual graduation rates.
Wilcoxson, Co-chair of the Senate Education
Committee, said those guidelines were
contained in a compact agreed upon by
the National Governors Association so
that states would have a uniform means
of compiling data that would allow for
accurate comparisons. Wilcoxson said
even within Oklahoma, when trying to
look at graduation rates, the percentages
in any given report may be vastly different
from one another because different criteria
are used.
“This is a problem not only in
Oklahoma, but across the nation. Some
states base their graduation rate on
how many seniors begin the school year
and then compare it to how many finish.
Some count students who don’t
actually get their diplomas, but get
a GED, and that’s not the same,”
Wilcoxson said. “Under these proposed
new guidelines, we’ll compare
the number of freshmen at the beginning
of that year to the actual number of
seniors graduating. That will give us
a more accurate picture.”
SB 985 next moves to the House of Representatives
for committee action.
For more information
contact:
Senator Wilcoxson's Office - (405) 521-5618