CA Study Shows Racial and Ethnic Gap in Admissions and Graduation
Wednesday, March 9, 2005 at 05:33AM
TheSpook
Of those Enrolled Only 13% of Latinos and 15% Blacks Graduate from Colleges
A report by the Public Policy Institute
of California found that the gap in college graduation and admissions
rates between Latinos and blacks on one hand and white and Asian
Americans on the other is widening, reports The San Jose Mercury News.
The study used 2000 Census data and found that only 13 percent of
Hispanics and 15 percent of blacks had earned a bachelor’s degree,
compared with 31 percent of whites and 62 percent of Asians. In
addition, 6.2 percent of black high school seniors and 6.5 percent of
Hispanic seniors met the minimum UC eligibility standards in 2002-03,
compared with 16.2 percent of whites and 31.4 percent of Asians.
Hispanics make up one-third of the state’s high school graduates but
only 12 percent of UC graduates. Blacks make up 7 percent of high
school graduates but only 3 percent of UC graduates. Deborah, Reed, the
author of the study, noted factors behind the gap, including family
disadvantages among black and Hispanic students. These students, she
said, are less likely to live with both parents, and their mothers are
less likely to have graduated from high school. In addition, their
families are more likely to have an income below the poverty line. Reed
also noted that black and Hispanic children are more likely to attend
under-achieving and overcrowded schools. In addition, more than 50
percent of Hispanics and 43 percent of blacks do poorly on state
achievement tests, compared with 11 percent of white students and 16
percent of Asian-American students. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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