It is not especially difficult to predict which ones might fail. Kansas State's Office of Planning and Analysis breaks down retention and graduate by ACT score. A student with a score under 19 has a 30 to 35 percent chance of graduating; one with a 32 or higher has an 80 to 85 percent chance of graduating. And this summer I had a student with an 11 ACT show up in my office for advising.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Kansas State Study on Retention Graduation Rate by ACT
Found at Phi Beta Cons. The K-State study and be found here. I'll compare it to the Idaho Universities in an upcoming post. from that Phi Beta Cons post:
Monday, November 3, 2008
Colleges as ‘Failure Factories’
Insidehighered.com has a story that describes cost of college dropouts to society:
Note that a previous post examined the graduation rate of the 3 Idaho universities.
Comparing American higher education unfavorably to its peers internationally as well as to U.S. high schools, he zeroes in, particularly, on about 408 four-year institutions that graduate fewer than one third of their students, and calculates the cost of those “failure factories,” as he calls them, at about $770 million in federal grant aid and lost tuition payments, to the government and families. How much longer, he asks, can the country abide such poor performance?
To assess the “cost” of these “failure factories” to society, Schneider calculates the amount of federal financial aid received by the 158,000 students who enrolled in a given year in the 408 institutions that graduated fewer than a third of their students. About 44 percent of those enrollees received federal grants averaging $2,405, and the average graduation rate at the institutions was 18 percent. He determines the total federal grants given to non-graduates from those institutions to be $120 million, and drops that figure to $90 million by assuming that 25 percent of them “eventually graduated from other institutions.” The report calculates the “lost tuition” paid by those students to be another $650 million.
Note that a previous post examined the graduation rate of the 3 Idaho universities.
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