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Wisconsin's Dropout Rate is Lowest in Nation

Wisconsin has the lowest high school dropout rate in the nation, according to a new report.

The 1999 Kids Count Data Book, issued by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, evaluates children’s health. Kids Count listed Wisconsin’s dropout rate as 4% between 1985 and 1996. Department of Public Instruction figures put the state’s 1998 dropout rate at 2.5%.

Wisconsin also ranked first in the country for the lowest percentage of “idle teenagers,” defined as teens not attending school and not working. About 4% of Wisconsin teens are classified as “idle,” compared to a national rate of 9%.

Wisconsin ranked fourth overall in terms of child well-being. The report used 10 risk factors ranging from infant mortality to family income and high school dropout rates to rank child well-being.

The percent of Wisconsin children in poverty was 13% in 1996, down from 16% in 1985. That is the sixth lowest level in the country. The number of Wisconsin families with children headed by a single parent rose, however, from 20% in 1985 to 23% in 1996. That is the sixth lowest in the nation.

Posted May 24, 1999