Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Governor to Hold Conference on Increasing the Graduation Rate of African American Males

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A press release was released today. Governor Ted Strickland is holding a confernce tomorrow May 30th on Increasing the Graduation Rate of African American Males. The press release is below.




For Immediate Release: Contact: Keith Dailey

Tuesday, May 29, 2007 614 644-0957/614 506-4949

Keith.Dailey@governor.ohio.gov


Governor to Hold Conference on Increasing the Graduation Rate of African American Males

Columbus, Ohio - Governor Ted Strickland and former state Sen. C.J. Prentiss, the Governor's Special Representative for Closing the Achievement Gap, will host a conference tomorrow, May 30, in Columbus focused on increasing the graduation rate of African American males.

"The low graduation rate of African American males is a problem with widespread implications for our state," Strickland said. "We need to work to keep these young people in school -- for the benefit of themselves, our communities and the economic strength of the state."

In the 2004-05 school year, only 64.4 percent of black males graduated from high school in Ohio, compared to white males at 88.2 percent. Overall in the 2004-05 school year, 68.4 percent of black students graduated from high school in Ohio, while 89.8 percent of white students graduated.

"We all know that many high schools in urban Ohio graduate only half their students," Prentiss said. "That's not a problem -- that's a crisis."

In addition, black males score consistently lower than both white and Hispanic males on the Ohio Graduation Test, which is required for graduation.

Prentiss has spent the past month meeting with mayors, superintendents, ministers and community leaders across Ohio to increase awareness of the issue and encourage collective efforts to increase the African American male graduation rate.

"Our message is one of shared responsibility and targeted action," Prentiss said. "We need students to become more serious, parents to intervene in their children's lives, and teachers and schools to have the professional knowledge and support to reach all students. We need businesses to do their part with jobs and internships, and the community in many cases to step in when these young men need guidance and direction."

The Governor's Conference on Increasing the High School Graduation Rate for African American Male Students will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 30 at the Columbus Convention Center. More than 1,500 Ohioans have already pre-registered for the event; on-site registration will be available from 8-9 a.m.

The conference will include breakout sessions, workshops, regional planning sessions and panel speakers. Governor Strickland will address the conference at noon.

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1 Comments:

At 8:41 PM, Blogger gloralln said...

i have an african american male who was supposed to graduate in 2008 but was suspended in 2007 for not a good enough reason but because of that he was not eligable for the altenate pathway,he had passed everything but his science ogttest by only two points,so he took the test in the summer and the same thing,but in aug of 2008 he enter in akron city school took the test and missed it by three points you tell us you want to increase the rate of graduates in male o any one else heres a child who went back to high school to get a dioplma another full year and beacause he cant pass the science ogt test his not exempt from one test that may hold him bake from a dioplma out of 14 yrs of school you let one mistake tear a childs future down.

 

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