See how your Mobile area high school’s graduation rate changed in 2022
Alabama’s class of 2022 high school graduation rate dropped statewide from 90.7% in 2021 to 88.2%.
In other words, out of the 53,869 students who started the ninth grade in 2018:
- 47,520 graduated on time,
- 1,943 are still enrolled in school but didn’t graduate yet,
- 620 completed school but didn’t get enough high school credit for taking challenging courses, and
- 3,038 students left school at some point before graduating.
When compared with the class of 2019, which escaped the pandemic’s impacts, more than three quarters of school districts lost ground. Alabama’s overall graduation rate for the class of 2019 was 91.7%.
Search for your district or high school in the table below.
Some high-marked schools in the coastal region include:
- Daphne High School
- Escambia County High School
- Mobile’s Mattie T. Blount High School
- Saraland High School
- Washington County’s Fruitdale High School
Individual school graduation rates for all students ranged from 40.6% at McIntyre Comprehensive Academy in Montgomery County, an alternative school for students at risk of not graduating, to 100% at 14 schools statewide.
Graduation rates are broken down by student group – race, ethnicity, gender, ability status, poverty status and English learner status – but are not included in the table below.
The table directly below allows you to look up each school’s overall high school graduation rate for the “all students” category. Click here if you are unable to see the table.
A full dashboard of all rates – best viewed on a larger screen – for every federally-defined student group can be found by clicking here.The dashboard will open in a separate window.