Here is the website to check out: http://www.memphistr.org/
(Here is a sneak peak from the website)
Nationally,
- Fourth graders growing up in low-income communities are already three grade levels behind their peers in high-income communities.
- Only 7% of low-income 8th grade students complete a bachelor's degree within 12 years.
- About 50% of them won’t graduate from high school by the time they are 18 years old.
- By twelfth grade, African Americans are typically four years behind their more affluent peers. These students are finishing High School with a Junior High education.
- Those who do not graduate from high school will earn approximately $17,000 annually, and those who only graduate from high school but do not attend college will earn only $20,000 annually – both below the national poverty level.
- The resulting social chaos from a lifetime of such low earnings potential is extreme.Only 1 in 10 will graduate from college.
In Memphis,
- 97% of African-American children attend public schools. 49% of white children attend public schools.
- More than half of all children living in Memphis live in neighborhoods of concentrated poverty (as defined by neighborhoods in which at least 20% of households live beneath the poverty level).
- Half of children living in high poverty neighborhoods change schools at least once per year. Changing schools is associated with academic under-performance.
- Approximately 5,000 young men and women turn 19 every year in Memphis without a High School diploma. Shelby County residents who work without a High School diploma earn, on average, $17,000 annually. College graduates earn $44,700 annually.
It doesn't have to be this way. These statistics can change.
1 comment:
MTR!!!! DO IT!! :)
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