The Educational Attainment of Chicago Public Schools Students (original) (raw)

Overview

This research brief looks at how CPS students’ high school graduation, four-year college enrollment, and bachelor’s degree completion have changed since 2006, when the UChicago Consortium estimated that just 8 percent of Chicago Public Schools (CPS) freshmen would graduate high school, immediately enroll in a four-year college, and go on to earn a bachelor’s degree by their mid-20s. According to this new analysis, an estimated 14 percent of ninth-graders in CPS will take this direct route to earn a four-year college degree within 10 years of starting high school. The figure is an index of the percentage of CPS students who graduate high school, immediately enroll in a four-year college, and earn a bachelor’s degree within six years of beginning college. An additional 3 percent of high school graduates who do not immediately enroll in a four-year college go on to earn a bachelors’ degree within six years, bringing the estimated percent of CPS ninth graders who will earn a bachelor’s degree to 17 percent.

This study also estimates the national index to be 18 percent, placing Chicago close to the national rate and ahead of other large urban districts that publish similar figures.

Findings from the report include:

This report is part of the Urban Education Institute’s To & Through project, a three-part release over the next year of data reports and an online tool designed to provide targeted information to schools, civic leaders, parents, and other stakeholders on key levers for college success.

Click below to view a panel discussion of the report, the data, and the implications from December 9, 2014.