The Mississippi Delta is a region in the United States that has been strongly impacted by poverty; childhood poverty in particular is especially high. Related to childhood poverty are dropout rates that are a function of both individual and environmental factors. T Price Dooley examined the effectiveness of school programs designed to keep children in school in seven school districts in the Mississippi Delta. He finds that while initially, the programs seemed to have an impact, with students who participated less likely to drop out than those who did not; the program’s effectiveness disappeared when other factors were taken into consideration. He argues that in order for dropout prevention programs to be effective for at-risk youth, they sh...
Yearly in Mississippi, a precariously high percentage of African American male students disappear fr...
Low high school graduation rates prove a major challenge for policymakers throughout the United Stat...
Graduation date: 1997The majority of today's youth succeed in the traditional educational\ud classro...
There has been much research in the past two decades about the dropout problem in America. Dropout r...
The dropout rate for many Mississippi high schools has improved tremendously over the last decade. I...
Schools face the dilemma of transforming both the trend of students dropping out of school and the a...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "The National C...
Outlines the economic costs of dropping out of high school and proposes dropout prevention strategie...
Mississippi has been overly burdened with a high dropout rate for generations but in 2007 began a pr...
Risk factors for dropout include poverty, low achievement, teen parenting, urban location, gender (m...
In recent years widespread concern has developed around the number of students, particularly black a...
Nationally, more than one in four high school freshmen does not graduate in four years; in the 50 la...
Though national dropout rates have generally fallen over the past twenty years, almost 1.2 million s...
The decision to drop out of high school is a serious problem for the individual making the decision ...
Georgia\u27s dropout rate in the school year 2004-2005 was 5.0% while the nation\u27s rate was 9.4%....
Yearly in Mississippi, a precariously high percentage of African American male students disappear fr...
Low high school graduation rates prove a major challenge for policymakers throughout the United Stat...
Graduation date: 1997The majority of today's youth succeed in the traditional educational\ud classro...
There has been much research in the past two decades about the dropout problem in America. Dropout r...
The dropout rate for many Mississippi high schools has improved tremendously over the last decade. I...
Schools face the dilemma of transforming both the trend of students dropping out of school and the a...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "The National C...
Outlines the economic costs of dropping out of high school and proposes dropout prevention strategie...
Mississippi has been overly burdened with a high dropout rate for generations but in 2007 began a pr...
Risk factors for dropout include poverty, low achievement, teen parenting, urban location, gender (m...
In recent years widespread concern has developed around the number of students, particularly black a...
Nationally, more than one in four high school freshmen does not graduate in four years; in the 50 la...
Though national dropout rates have generally fallen over the past twenty years, almost 1.2 million s...
The decision to drop out of high school is a serious problem for the individual making the decision ...
Georgia\u27s dropout rate in the school year 2004-2005 was 5.0% while the nation\u27s rate was 9.4%....
Yearly in Mississippi, a precariously high percentage of African American male students disappear fr...
Low high school graduation rates prove a major challenge for policymakers throughout the United Stat...
Graduation date: 1997The majority of today's youth succeed in the traditional educational\ud classro...