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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Sisters
High School has few dropouts Sisters High
School has a near-zero dropout rate. During the last school year (2001-02),
only three of the 453 students enrolled at the beginning of the year withdrew
before the year was over.
This produced an official dropout rate of .66 percent, according to an
annual report issued earlier this month by the State Department of Education.
Sisters' experience is part of a favorable story across the state. The
statewide dropout rate for 2001-02 was 4.9 percent, representing the fourth
consecutive year the rate has fallen. It was 6.9 percent in 1997-98.
The report said that six of the eight traditional public high schools
in the three counties of Central Oregon recorded their lowest rates in
11 years. Sisters was one of those.
Bob Jones, a research analyst who focuses on this topic at the state
department, said more high schools are tracking down students as soon
as they show signs of falling behind and they are offering more options
to keep kids connected to the school.
"They are not letting these kids just slide or disappear," he told The
Oregonian. "They send the message, 'We want you. You're important.
Let's find a way to make this work.'"
His words echoed those of Sisters School Superintendent Steve Swisher
and Sisters High School Principal Boyd Keyser.
Swisher pointed to the development of alternative programs for students
who fall behind so they "at least have a way to stay connected" and, if
possible, eventually re-enter the regular program.
The size of the school helps, too, Swisher believes. Sisters officially
had 453 students in the fall of 2001-02, making it the third smallest
of the eight high schools in the region. Regional enrollments ranged from
162 students at Culver High (with a dropout rate of 5.56 percent) to 1,634
at Redmond High (with a rate of 1.47 percent).
"Class sizes (here) are generally small, and generally every teacher
can know every student in school by name," Swisher said. "When you have
2,000 students that isn't possible. So it is harder (here) for a student
to feel anonymous or that someone isn't caring. I think that has as much
to do with (keeping students in school) as any special program."
Similar thoughts were voiced by principal Keyser: "I think part of it
is just the general philosophy. When I first arrived here (four years
ago) we developed core values. The first one is that we are going to establish
a caring community. Kids feel like it's a place where they can find a
niche, a place where they want to be. That's the number one reason we
have such a low rate. Kids do feel like they belong here."
He also said the school does "a very good job, especially for a small
school" of making sure there are activities for students with a wide variety
of backgrounds and interests.
Eighty-two percent of Sisters High students are involved in co-curricular
activities. Those activities, from sports to music to video-making, used
to be called "extra-curricular." The change in terminology suggests emphasis
on the social and educational value of this part of the total school program.
Keyser also cited the importance of the high school's Flex program, which
"used to be a place where we sent the kids that we didn't want to deal
with. Now it's an alternative that's really beneficial, a place for kids
to readjust, get settled, and hopefully to re-enter the more normal school...But
if they don't, that's okay, too, and we're still going to continue to
wrap our arms around them and tell them 'You belong.'"
Flex students who earn alternative diplomas now participate in the same
commencement ceremony as other graduates. Measuring
dropout rates Educators are
applauding the results of a State Department of Education study that shows
the statewide dropout rate for 2001-02 at 4.9 percent, falling from 6.9
percent in 1997-98.
Some of the improving dropout
rates around the state may be due to a change several years ago in the
way the phenomenon is measured.
Today, a dropout is defined
fairly narrowly as a student who withdrew from school during the year
and did not graduate from or transfer to another school that could lead
to a diploma of some type.
Those who drop out of regular
school and attend alternative high school programs or work on General
Educational Development (GED) certificates are not counted as dropouts.
Fourteen months ago, Oregon
news media gave a lot of attention to the release of a national study
by the politically conservative Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
which concluded that in 1998 only 67 percent of those who should have
earned high school diplomas in Oregon actually did so.
This measure of the "graduation
rate," the flip side of a dropout rate, indicated that the national rate
was 74 percent. On this scale, Oregon ranked a low 40th among the states.
The Manhattan study used an
entirely different methodology. It took eighth-grade enrollments in 1993,
adjusted them for state population growth, and compared the result with
the number of students earning diplomas in 1998.
It gave no credit for students
who were still working toward regular or alternative diplomas in other
settings.
But no mention of that study
or others with similarly dour conclusions marred the acclaim that greeted
yet another favorable official state school dropout report this month.
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