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More Hispanic Students Graduating And Attending College, Census Says

Hispanic Students

CHRISTINE ARMARIO   06/ 8/11 07:45 PM ET   AP

MIAMI — A higher percentage of young Hispanic adults is finishing high school, and the number attending a two-year college has nearly doubled over the last decade, according to Census data released Wednesday.

The percentage of Hispanic 18- to 24-year-olds who are not enrolled in high school and don't have an equivalent degree was 22 percent in 2008, down from 34 percent in 1998.

Meanwhile, the number attending a 2-year college increased 85 percent, from 540,000 in 2000 to 1 million in 2008.

"It's an amazing level of growth," said Kurt Bauman, the chief of the Census Bureau's education branch.

Researchers said the numbers on high school completion were the result of several factors, including targeted efforts to reduce the number of Latino students dropping out, as well as an increasing percentage born and attending all their schooling in the United States.

But several experts also expressed concern that high numbers are choosing two-year colleges, where students tend to have lower completion rates and frequently do not go on to earn a bachelor's degree.

Jose Cruz, vice president for higher education policy and practice with the Education Trust, pointed to studies that show a majority of Latino students aspire to earn a bachelor's degree, but noted they are overrepresented in 2-year institutions. He attributed the gap to issues of K-12 preparation, insufficient counseling and the overwhelming financial contribution low-income families must make in order to attend a 4-year institution.

Frank Alvarez, president of the Hispanic Scholarship Fund, himself a community college graduate, said that many students fail to finish an associate's degree because they find themselves inadequately prepared and lacking guidance once they make their way into the system.

"If you're going to community college because it's less costly, or because it's the option that's closest to you, there's nothing wrong with that, but please continue to a four-year school," Alvarez said.

The Census report contained a number of other education indicators, including data on early education and demographics. The number of students enrolled in kindergarten has increased from 2.9 million in 1978 to 4 million in 2008. Higher numbers are also going to full-day instead of part-day programs.

Among nursery school students, Hispanic students made up 18 percent, an increase of 5 percent from 1998.

Deborah Santiago, vice president for policy and research at Excelencia in Education, said the findings on high school completion should be celebrated, though she cautioned there was still significant work to be done targeting dropout factories and increasing college readiness.

"What this does is create an opportunity to think about the population even more clearly as a college-going community, as a community that does have educational success," Santiago said.

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sibyl9
Cloaking Device Engaged
12:04 AM on 06/14/2011
In the 99.9% Latino school that I teach at, I recently passed most of my high school class - mostly "D's," but passed nevertheless. As I argue against passing these students who cannot write a sentence, will not study, do not possess adequate vocabulary and English skills, must have open-book tests and still make D's after giving them the exact test questions the day or two before the test, my colleagues tell me that administration will come down on me, the students just need the paper so they can get low-skill service jobs, etc. I'm disgusted. The public high school diploma means little in CA.
12:12 AM on 06/14/2011
Education is not valued in that culture, but getting a free pass is.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
07:59 AM on 06/14/2011
Perhaps, you need to find a new job that better suits your background.
03:21 AM on 06/12/2011
It would be interesting to see some statistics which state gets the highest rate of Latino graduates. I would guess California?

Steve from www.essaytask.com
02:14 PM on 06/11/2011
This is the natural progression of things and what makes America so great. The increasing number of Latinos is now more due to natural birth than to migration, legal or unauthorized. The rise in the population and the growth and development are on track with other immigrant groups of the past. We will see a natural progression of this group, grow up here, graduate from high school, and go onto college and earn professional degrees. Much like the Irish, the influence of Latinos will be widely felt for decades to come and over several generations. When the country's Baby Boom population dwindles, it's this group of new Americans who will provide the productivity on all scales the country needs for the next 100 years. Unlike Europe and Japan with their aging and dwindling populations we can expect their productivity to decline because of their inability to absorb new immigrants.

For those Tea Parties and Republicans, the lesson here is assimilation is the key, and I don't mean assimilation in the old vein. Thus the cruel and misguided blockage of the Dream Act in December stands in stark contrast to the growing achievement of these other Latino high school grads.
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REMEMBER2050
Bring on that War on Women, GOP! I'm game.
01:31 PM on 06/12/2011
Great post. This was a marvelous article about marvelous statistics.
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BeautifulOnDaOutside
I ♥ Huffington Post
02:26 PM on 06/14/2011
A population growth based economy is simply a ponzi scheme that will eventually lead to ruin. We should be building an economy that is based on a stable population, especially now that we are running out of petroleum, and are facing a future of much more expensive energy and food.
03:51 PM on 06/14/2011
No matter how big the immigrant population grows, or the Hispanic population, it will not be enough to replace the Baby Boomers when they begin to die off. We will see an eventual drop off in the overall population but without them we would see shrinkage to the level that it would impact our production and our national security.
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Captain Ron
Sí, se puede!
01:01 PM on 06/11/2011
Good to see the students graduating high school at a higher rate. Unfortunately, they are still ill-prepared for higher-education. High school diplomas aren't worth much these days. Students should have to pass an entrance exam to get into high school so that high school teachers can teach high school level content instead of concentrating on elementary skills these students never learned in the first place.
12:05 PM on 06/10/2011
This is no surprise. As "Hispanic" is not a race, identifying oneself as Hispanic can be viewed as more a language and cultural orientation, or preference in some cases. When I was a kid, "German" was a race, along with all the other ethnic (langaguage based) groups (French, Polish, Spanish, Mexican, Itailian, Canadian). The term "race" tends to change based upon demographics and is so often socially constructed in tantum with the US Census. So if we think about a generation that works to assimilate into specific mainstream areas of society, education in this case, we can hardly be surprised that they are achieving based upon the demands of those institutions.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
12:20 PM on 06/10/2011
True. However, the difference being that immigrants back then were forced to erase their identities and become some derivation of white Protestant Anglos. We have no intention of doing that...at all.
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
09:12 AM on 06/11/2011
My girlfriend's family is three generations from Spain. They don't think of themselves as Spanish or Hispanic. But, when she brings her family history up to first generation Hispanics, they tell her that her background "doesn't count." Funny! All groups melt in the pot. My family is no longer German or French. We don't speak Pennsylvania Dutch anymore, which was passed down orally for almost two hundred years before that link was severed. So, what you intend won't matter! By the way, I don't think of myself as "some derivation of white Protestant Anglos," which seems bigoted to me to put it that way, although you seem comfortable with that description. I just think of myself as an American. Upon meeting me, the rest of the world would, too. Live in America for five years and it won't matter whether you call yourself a Dominican, a Guatemalen, a Mexican, or some other national group, you will be an American. Go to Europe and tell them you are Domican, etc., and they'll say "No! You're an American." What you intend won't matter.
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
09:01 AM on 06/11/2011
Does the article identify "Hispanic" as a "race"? I don't see it.
02:03 PM on 06/11/2011
Once removed. It appears as a very confusing aspect of the Census. My comments were based upon the Census from decades ago that had different "races" and groups mentioned than today. It is more for demographic modeling that determining race. There was nothing about Hispanic or Pacific Islanders decades ago because the immigration was mostly from Europe. So the "race/ethnicity" aspect of the Census has includes Hispanic because it is a a statistic they want to track versus a race.
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Jenn May
"insert clever quote here"
09:57 AM on 06/10/2011
Yay!
07:44 AM on 06/10/2011
I read some good news about Hispanics and there is a typo right in the first sentence! I'm a Hispanic high school teacher by the way. :)
09:46 AM on 06/10/2011
I was really excited to come read this story and then I read that first line and winced. Nonetheless it is still great news!
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
11:30 AM on 06/10/2011
Well if you're a teacher then you know there is no such thing as a Hispanic or Latino and should be teaching your students the truth of where and why these words were invented.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
11:54 AM on 06/10/2011
More nonsense.
02:03 PM on 06/11/2011
"Latino" is a derivative of the words "Latino Americano" and they describe accurately many people in this group.
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mburgh
Come Back Samuel Gompers
06:39 AM on 06/10/2011
I'm glad to see this. The number of Latino students in my classes is rising slowly but rising it is.
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Edguy52
Heavy Metal Maniac
12:17 AM on 06/10/2011
First Generation hispanic student attending UC BERKELEY here, I'm glad to read this growing number.
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Big Game Hunter
Facts are Republican Kryptonite
06:10 AM on 06/10/2011
Me too... but a lot of tea-baggers are starting to boil over about it...
senseandnonsense
Trapeze artist
07:26 AM on 06/10/2011
We had our first hispanic valedictorian just this year. He headed a class of more than 800 graduating students. (The description of his family reminded me of my father's. My father's father was a machinist who worked in a textile mill. His parents spoke a different language as their first language (Pennsylvania Dutch) and encouraged the use of English in the home.) His father works in a factory but values education and promotes it to his children. Family support like that is important.
08:45 PM on 06/09/2011
All this is great news but not new. With the Hispanic population becoming the majority minority or whatever, this was a likely result, but was it due exclusively to population growth? Maybe. maybe not. Some regression analysis can point out which variables are the leading causes of this surge. Somebody do this. Regression analysis takes forever =]
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
08:37 PM on 06/09/2011
.... and the uneducated white man continues to fall further behind than ever before .... and all those high-paying factory jobs are just a myth today ....
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
11:57 AM on 06/10/2011
As the real Affirmative Action falls away, they fall further and further behind. But, hey, they'll always try to squash a few Black people to make themselves feel better.
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Captain Ron
Sí, se puede!
06:12 PM on 06/10/2011
Keep living the dream, lady.
06:32 PM on 06/10/2011
http://nation.foxnews.com/eric-holder/2011/06/10/racial-quota-scandal-obama-justice-department;

Holder seems to think the black man isn't smart enough to pass a standard test... hmm...
02:07 PM on 06/11/2011
The uneducated anybody will fall behind. The march to globalism sees only money not race. The uneducated are squashed regardless and some may luck out, but most will not.
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NCScientist
St. Ronnie raised taxes eleven times...
08:10 PM on 06/09/2011
Viva la Razza!!!
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
08:04 PM on 06/09/2011
Is this a story of Hispanic Americans or Hispanic Americans and illegals? Some people like to lump them together and blur the line and use the higher numbers. Any illegal who attends college must remember they can not be legally employed in the US.
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nova1215
08:21 PM on 06/09/2011
What a stupid point.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
10:21 PM on 06/09/2011
Might also, consider w/o a SSN for a background check ~ high paying white-collar jobs in professions i.e. medical or legal fields are out of the question

Have said all along ~ pursue naturalized U.S. Citizenship first ~~ or you'll have a career as a cash-under-the-table college degree dish washer

14 year old illegals are eligible for Student Visas

18 year old illegals are eligible for Green Cards to pursue naturalized U.S. Citizenship
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
12:00 PM on 06/10/2011
I don''t know why these ra cists keep going with this silly point. Oh, we're just after the "illegals" (wink, wink) as if we don't see and hear their ra cism with everyone else and everything they do. America will be a better place when they are gone.
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Captain Ron
Sí, se puede!
06:09 PM on 06/10/2011
H8 will always have home as long as you remain on the planet. You're single-handedly keeping ra cism alive.
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08:04 PM on 06/09/2011
All children should learn English and Spanish in grade school.
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Captain Ron
Sí, se puede!
08:42 PM on 06/09/2011
English and Mandarin would be more appropriate.
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09:06 PM on 06/09/2011
Actually all three,
and with Latin,
that is an excellent foundation.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
12:00 PM on 06/10/2011
I agree.
08:04 PM on 06/09/2011
I don't know how many times I've heard people comment on how good of workers Hispanics were. Meaning of course they are good laborers. My response was that if they work so hard at labor jobs what makes you think they wouldn't work this hard given education opportunities. There is no reason to think that they couldn't handle college work. And I'm not Hispanic.
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12:13 AM on 06/10/2011
They are neither mutually ex or inclusive.
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GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
12:01 PM on 06/10/2011
Exactly. No one works harder than the poor. It's just that thy aren't paid fairly.