Texas A&M Study Shows Dropouts Cost Texas Billions
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Updated: 3:49 PM Aug 25, 2009
Texas A&M Study Shows Dropouts Cost Texas Billions
COLLEGE STATION, Aug. 25, 2009 – Students who drop out of high school will cost Texas up to $9.6 billion in lost revenue and outright expenses over their lifetimes.
Posted: 3:46 PM Aug 25, 2009
Reporter: Texas A&M
Email Address: news@kbtx.com
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COLLEGE STATION, Aug. 25, 2009 – Students who drop out of high school will cost Texas up to $9.6 billion in lost revenue and outright expenses over their lifetimes, and that figure escalates as each new crop of dropouts is created, concludes a study commissioned by the United Ways of Texas and written by The Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University.

A team of 10 graduate students used lost wages, diminished sales tax revenue and welfare payments to calculate the costs in their report, “The ABCD’s of Texas Education: Assessing the Benefits and Costs of Reducing the Dropout Rate.” The effects of dropouts on crime and the associated costs were also considered.

The calculations were based on the projected dropout rate for the class of 2012 – 12.2 percent to 22.2 percent, or 40,519 to 73,692 students.

The United Ways of Texas commissioned the project, with instructions to determine methods for measuring and quantifying the state’s dropout rates, estimate the dropout rate’s economic impact on the state and review dropout prevention programs, identifying best practices.

The report further notes that a reduction in high school students could save the state up to $1.1 billion in education-related costs each year, but investing in keeping these students in school produces a substantial long-term monetary gain.

Similar research projects, called Capstone Projects, are required of all second-year students enrolled in the Bush School at Texas A&M. The faculty advisor for the project was Lori Taylor, who teaches in the Bush School and in Texas A&M's Department of Economics and is also a program area leader for school finance, facilities and organizations in the State of Texas Education Research Center at Texas A&M.

The project was intended as an informative tool for policy makers, legislators and other key stakeholders to use in their deliberation of education policy, specific to dropout prevention, within Texas, the summary states.

“Through the extensive research and analysis devoted to this project, we believe the findings are vast and troublesome, and in need of immediate attention for the wellbeing of the Texas education system and economy,” the researchers note.


Latest Comments

Posted by: overlord Location: college station, tx on Oct 18, 2009 at 07:01 AM

The school is an ominous microcosm of our society. NCLB was misguided and is a demonstrated bust, but collateral damage abounds. The USA is spending one billion dollars more per/yr on our degenerated ed than defense. The status quo of mediocre ed for our gifted and on task students in favor of the lowest common denominator is ludicrous. The TX economy is the ultimate loser. This beaurocratic analysis paralysis has hindered academic progress w/ its perverse slight of gifted students and those who stay on task. More funds is a fool's errand; it is a pernicious veil over the true culprit; an abysmal lack of discipline. Walk into any school and notice the Lord of the Flies pathos personified by student behavior between classes. It's a quagmire of inertia and disrespect/disdain for rules/authority, etc. There are no tangible consequences for disorderly conduct, profanities; etc.; not when admin "befriends" reprobates. Fear is a great motivator; corporal punishment is a proven remedy
Posted by: Anonymous on Sep 2, 2009 at 12:12 PM

Do a way with the TAKS test, more kids will stay in school
Posted by: Bill Betzen Location: Dallas on Aug 28, 2009 at 06:55 AM

This study is accurate in the fact that billions of dollars are lost in Texas due to our dropout rate. Sadly the study under-estimates the actual number of Texas students who fail to graduate. For the past decade Texas had had an average of 317,000 students enrolled in the 8th grade according to enrollment numbers from the Texas Education agency web site. During the same time an average of only 226,000 diplomas are given out each year. (9th grade numbers are not used since ninth grade has many students repeating it due to the high 9th grade failure rates in Texas.) Thus, Texas consistently has over 90,000 students missing at graduation. Sadly the frightening costs documented in this A&M study are probably not high enough. Google "Dallas" and "dropout" and study the first hit. That site goes over the dropout documentation issue. It also describes a dropout solution that is slowly spreading in Dallas ISD.
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