“While the attrition rate did decline, Texas high schools lost over 80,000 students, and racial-ethnic gaps still remain,” said Celina Moreno, J.D., IDRA President & CEO. “Federal pandemic response funding for school programming provides an opportunity to implement programs and strategies that work.”
There is no doubt that the pandemic negatively impacted students’ school attendance, engagement, participation and learning, and additional research will examine its effects in the coming years. It is too early to know the full impact. As the nation passed its two-year anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic’s shutdown of schools, IDRA explored how the pandemic affected the six school policies and practices that lead to higher dropout rates: exclusionary discipline; in-grade retention; low funding and insufficient support for emergent bilingual students; unfair and insufficient funding; watered-down, non-college prep curricula; and testing that is high-stakes.
“The investments of some school districts in dropout prevention and college readiness initiatives are making a difference in supporting students through graduation and beyond,” said Moreno. “But much of our state leadership has instead shown a willingness to neglect many of our students and their families by weakening curriculum and graduation requirements, censoring classrooms and books, and withholding fair funding that would pay for vital teachers and programs.”
Almost four decades ago, IDRA conducted the first-ever comprehensive study of school dropouts in Texas. IDRA developed a now industry-wide attrition methodology to calculate the number and percent of high school students leaving school prior to graduating with a high school diploma. This made it possible to measure a class of students over time since schools lose a number of students before their senior year. The initial rate of 33% found in IDRA’s landmark 1985-86 study resulted in over 86,000 students missing from high school enrollment, a figure not much higher than in 2020-21.
Each fall, IDRA releases its attrition study. Attrition rates are an indicator of a school's holding power, or the ability to keep students enrolled in school and learning until they graduate. IDRA is the only organization that has examined Texas attrition rates consistently, with the same methodology, for 34 years.
The annual attrition studies released by IDRA include county-level data by race and ethnicity. Trend graphs of high school attrition in each Texas county are available online. The study includes detailed findings, a supplemental analysis for reaching a rate of zero and graphics showing different types of dropout data.