All students should graduate from high school ready for college, careers, and citizenship.
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Correct. Pennsylvania earned just 4 points out of a possible 32. See the state’s full details in its transparency report here.
That’s right. For the full details on this and other criteria Achieve used to award points in the transparency reports, please see the transparency report methodology.
You’re right. Just Delaware and Nevada earned a perfect score in the category evaluating whether states report data for all eight indicators of student readiness. Check out their complete state reports here.
You’re right. Oklahoma is the only state that doesn’t publicly report their four-year graduation rate.
Just ten states – Massachusetts, Ohio, Oregon, Washington, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Louisiana, Nevada, and Florida – report data about whether students are on track to graduate. See how all states stack up here.
Minnesota and Massachusetts earned top marks in Achieve’s transparency reports for breaking their data down by student subgroups, earning scores of 7.25 and 7 out of 8 possible points, respectively. See how all states did here.
The average score was just above a 50% - 16.5 out of 32 possible points. See the full set of transparency reports here.
Hawaii, Illinois, Nevada, North Carolina, and Tennessee all report college- and career-ready assessment results, but they don’t break the results down by student subgroups. See which states report data by subgroups here.
You’ve got some knowledge about state transparency, but you’re not an expert yet. Study up by taking a look through our full set of state CCR transparency reports.
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