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Scott broke promise for Florida to rise to No. 1 in high school graduation rates

Graduate Shannon Recor leaves a graduation ceremony for Marjory Stoneman Douglas seniors, Sunday, June 3, 2018, in Sunrise, Fla. (AP) Graduate Shannon Recor leaves a graduation ceremony for Marjory Stoneman Douglas seniors, Sunday, June 3, 2018, in Sunrise, Fla. (AP)

Graduate Shannon Recor leaves a graduation ceremony for Marjory Stoneman Douglas seniors, Sunday, June 3, 2018, in Sunrise, Fla. (AP)

Amy Sherman
By Amy Sherman November 28, 2018

Gov. Rick Scott set the bar high on high school graduation rates: He promised Florida would rise to the top spot.

But Florida has fallen far short of Scott's 2014 re-election campaign promise.

There are a few different ways to measure graduation rates. One common measurement is the federal government's cohort method, which examines how many students who enter 9th grade graduate four years later with a standard diploma.

By that measurement, Florida's rate in 2015-16 was 80.7 percent, below the majority of the states and the national average of 84.1 percent.

Florida's rate placed it in 37th place, said Sterling Lloyd, assistant director for the Education Week Research Center.

"It will take significant work to catch Iowa at 91.3 percent," Lloyd said.

The 2015-16 data is the most recent available from the federal government. The Florida Department of Education provided PolitiFact with the following year's data showing a graduation rate of 82.3 percent in 2016-17, an all-time high during Scott's tenure which started in 2011. However, the state data also shows that the graduation rate has climbed every year since 2006-07, which includes former Gov. Charlie Crist's tenure.

Improvements are notable, but Scott promised that Florida would climb to No. 1. The state has not achieved anywhere near that ranking.

We rate this Promise Broken.

Our Sources

Florida Department of Education, Florida's High School Cohort 2016-17 Graduation Rate, January 2018

National Center for Education Statistics, Table 1. Public high school 4-year adjusted cohort graduation rate (ACGR), by race/ethnicity and selected demographic characteristics for the United States, the 50 states, and the District of Columbia: School year 2015–16

Interview, Meghan Collins, Florida Department of Education spokeswoman, Nov. 20, 2018

Interview, David Bills, professor at the University of Iowa College of Education, Nov. 19, 2018

Interview, Sherman Dorn, Arizona State University Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College division director and professor, Nov. 25, 2018

Interview, Sterling Lloyd, Education Week Research Center assistant director, Nov. 20, 2018