According to the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, only 18 high school freshmen out of every 100 students nationally will graduate from college on time, which is now considered to be within six years of enrollment. Taking an even more profound look at the 68, on average, who will complete high school, only 40 will enter college immediately after their high school graduation and many will enter unprepared.
These statistics are staggering and appear especially dismissal when focusing on the Black students who graduate from high school at a rate much lower than the national average. Just 56 percent of Blacks graduate from high school, of which 40 percent enter a post-secondary institution immediately after high school. Unfortunately, the overall results of the 2006 ACT tests clearly demonstrates the fact that Black youth are entering their post-secondary careers with substantial deficiencies. In fact, only 3 percent of Blacks taking the 2006 test met or exceeded benchmarks on all four tests.
Many Black students, valedictorians included, are entering college completely ill-equipped academically and with the false perception of post-secondary education as being a form of “advanced high school.” The problems in education are twofold: the failure to graduate and the failure to graduate students prepared for success in college. A lack of exposure to higher education, increasingly lowered expectations in the classroom, and an effortless high school course load completely devoid of rigor are all factors which can be ascribed to such a low level of preparedness and rate of retention.