School-Aged Youth: Graduation - WordPress.com
Transcript of School-Aged Youth: Graduation - WordPress.com
60
70
80
90
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
6770 69
72 72
82
89
72
80
87
72
80
87
69
79
85
0
5
10
15
20
25
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
10
15
2123
9
14
1921
9
14
20 21
8
13
19 20
YPSILANTI SALINE ANN ARBOR
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
2013 2014 20150
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
2013 2014 20150
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
2013 2014 2015
Absenteeism
10
20
30
40
50
2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16
ED Students Statewide
ED Students Washtenaw
Non-ED Students Statewide
Non-ED Students Washtenaw
Asian 2 or more races
Black (non-Hispanic origin)
White (non-Hispanic origin)Hispanic Amer. Indian/
Alaskan origin
Economically Disadvantaged All Washtenaw
Priority Population Goal % Served
Individuals and families residing in census tracts with a low or very low opportunity score rating on the Washtenaw Opportunity Index 25–50% 74%
Families with newborns enrolled in Medicaid and/or families with children enrolled in MIChild 20–35% 24%
Homebound seniors 20–35% 30%
Individuals and families experiencing chronic homelessness 15–30% 13%
Individuals and families residing in the zip codes of 48197 and 48198 70–75% 46%
Individuals and families with annual incomes at or below 200% of the Federal Poverty Level 75–85% 90%
46%
10%
90%49%
5%
48118
48158
48189
48105
48198
48197
4817048168
48108
48104
48191
48178
48130
48103
48176
48160
0
00
1
0
0
1
00
0 2
48
86
21
130127
3
> 200% Fed Poverty
<= 200% Fed Poverty
Unknown
77% 10%63.4%
23.5%
9.5%
8%4%
0.9%
White
Black/African Am.
Asian
Multi-Racial
Other/Unknown
2.7%
5-Year High School Graduation Rate (%)
5-Year Graduation Rate for 3 School Districts (%)
5-Year High School Drop-Out Rate (%)
COMMUNITY TRENDS Graduation rates overall, and among
economically disadvantaged youth in particular, are higher than the statewide rates.
The average dropout rate last year was about 5.5%, lower than statewide rate of 9%.
There was increased engagement with best practices and graduation rates have improved (overall and youth with low incomes).
Despite this success there has been an overall increase in absenteeism among economically disadvantaged youth.
This section illustrates the total number of participants who reported achieving specifed outcomes, and the corresponding percentage of achievement for all participants working on that outcome.*
DEMOGRAPHIC DATA
PROGRAM LEVEL OUTCOMES
ED = Economically Disadvantaged
Our Community Outcome: Increase the high school graduation rate of economically disadvantaged youth.
School-Aged Youth:
Intervention Programming to Foster Literacy, Academic Succss, and School Attendance and Engagement
Graduation
Youth who increased school attendance
As measured by PowerSchool or report cards
Youth who maintained school attendance
As measured by PowerSchool or report cards
Youth who are proficient in core academic subjects (math, ELA, science and/or social studies)
As measured by PowerSchool, report cards, or other assessments
Sources: 2017 Report Card published by the Washtenaw Alliance for Children and Youth; MI School Data; Center for Educational Performance and Information
Above goal
Within goal
Slightly below goal
Well below goal
13641%
22356%
20586%
Number of SAY-Grad Participants by ZIP Code (FIGURE 1)
Breakdown by INCOME
Income of all WCF
Participants (FIGURE 2A)
Total served: 27,985
Income of SAY-Grad
Participants (FY19)
(FIGURE 2B)Total served: 444
Total served: 444
Map reflects participants served for which Washtenaw County ZIP codes were reported.
Race of SAY-Grad
Participants (FY19)
(FIGURE 3B)Total served: 444
Race of Washtenaw
County Residents(FIGURE 3A)
*Source: ACS 2017
Breakdown by RACE
Washtenaw Coordinated Funders (WCF) is meeting the needs of our community’s most vulnerable in four priority areas through three funding components intended to: Support human services programming; Build nonprofit capacity; Foster community collaboration and systems-level change. WCF includes the following partners: Ann Arbor Area Community Foundation (AAACF); Office of Community and Economic Development (OCED), representing Washtenaw County, Urban County and the City of Ann Arbor; United Way of Washtenaw County (UWWC); Saint Joseph Mercy Ann Arbor (SJMAA). For more information, visit our website: coordinatedfunders.org.
Below are the boundary- and priority area- spanning populations that WCF are prioritizing across the funding portfolio. Percentages are estimates based on data from programs electing to track the information—they do not represent totals for all WCF participants.
POPULATIONS SERVED ACROSS ALL PRIORITY AREAS
Community Dashboard JULY 2018–JUNE 2019
ATTENDANCE & GRADUATION OF WASHTENAW COUNTY SCHOOL-AGED YOUTH