Graduation rates plunge at some San Jose high schools

Editor’s note: This story was produced for the independent Mosaic Journalism Program for Bay Area high school students, an intensive course in journalism. Students in the program report and photograph stories under the guidance of professional journalists

Going to school is something a lot of kids dread. Despite knowing how important it is, sometimes life gets in the way and missing school can be a necessity. What happens when kids take that to the extreme?

Lately, California schools have focused more on chronic absenteeism, defined as when a student misses 10% or more of the school year. Almost 25% of California high school students fell into that category in the 2022-23 school year, according to the California School Dashboard.

Not attending school may affect whether students graduate or not.

“Attendance is the No. 1 predictor of graduation and dropout rates,” said Sergio Diaz, director of communications for the East Side Union High School District.

Last year, the state’s graduation rate slipped 1 percentage point to 86.4%. East Side Union’s graduation rate dropped 2.6 percentage points to 86.9%, but some schools reported much greater decreases.

The East Side schools whose rate declined the most were Mount Pleasant,  dropped 6%; Overfelt, dropped 10.3%; and James Lick, dropped 16%.

In the San Jose Unified School District, San Jose High experienced a 7.6% decline and Gunderson, a 7.5% drop.

Diaz said East Side Union has an “early warning system,” which alerts them when students need extra support. The early warning system works based on categories. There’s the green category which focuses on students who are missing school but not falling behind in classes. When students start getting a D or an F in a class as well as missing school, they move into the yellow category. They make it into red when they have multiple D’s or F’s and are constantly missing school.

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