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American Indian Education Knowledgbase

This KnowledgeBase archive includes content and external links that were accurate and relevant as of September 30, 2019.

The American Indian Education KnowledgeBase is an online resource to aid education professionals in their efforts to improve the education of American Indian students and close the achievement gap American Indian students have faced in public, Bureau of Indian Education, and other schools.

Task 2: Examine Student Performance Data

Guideline: A number of studies show American Indian students with a dropout rate twice the national average, resulting in the highest dropout rate of any United States ethnic or racial group. About three out of every 10 native students drop out before graduating from high school.

Academically capable native students often drop out of school because their needs are not being met. Some native students are pushed out because they protest how they are treated in school in a variety of ways. As with non-native dropouts, the most frequent reason dropouts give for leaving school is that it is "boring."

The 2005 report Status and Tends of Education of American Indians and Alaska Natives by the National Center for Education Statistics reported an American Indian dropout rate of 15% (compared to a 6% rate for "white" students) and noted dropouts were more likely to be unemployed or to earn less than high school graduates. The study noted American Indians had three times the rate of unemployment, the highest death rate for ages 15-19, the highest number of special education students and the highest rate of absenteeism. The study also found American Indian students are the most effected by school violence and are least likely to have access to core academic programs.

Therefore, it is essential educators with native students in their schools carefully monitor their academic performance.

The contents of this website were developed under a grant from the U.S. Department of Education and are intended for general reference purposes only. However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the U.S. Department of Education or the Center, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government. Some resources on this site require Adobe Acrobat Reader. This website archive includes content and external links that were accurate and relevant as of September 30, 2019.