Black male students in Orange County in 2005/6 graduated at lower rates than the national average, as they had in 2004/5, as did White male students. Because of this and improvements in the Black male rate (and a slight decline in the White male rate), the racial gap is narrower in Orange County than the national average.
The Benchmark for graduation rates of Black male students for school districts enrolling more than 10,000 Black male students is 82% (Fort Bend, Texas).
|
Male Students |
Graduation Rate 2005/6 (est.) |
Graduation Rate 2004/5 |
||||||
|
Black Males |
Black |
White |
Gap |
Black |
White |
Black Change |
White Change |
|
|
USA |
4.3 mil. |
47% |
75% |
28% |
47% |
74% |
0% |
1% |
|
Florida |
326,757 |
38% |
60% |
22% |
35% |
56% |
3% |
4% |
|
Orange |
25,367 |
37% |
58% |
21% |
33% |
59% |
3% |
-1% |


The number of out-of-school suspensions given to Black male students in the Orange County public schools was equivalent to twelve percent of Orange's Black, non-Hispanic male student population and the percentage of out-of-school suspensions given to the White male students in Orange was equivalent to just over a third of that, four percent in the 2004/5 school year, as reported to the Office of Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Education.
White, non-Hispanic male students were admitted to Orange's Gifted and/or Talented programs at more than seven times the rate for Black, non-Hispanic male students, while Black, non-Hispanic male students were placed in Mental Retardation classifications at nearly four times the rate for White male students. If Black male students had been admitted to Gifted and/or Talented programs at the same rate as White male students, at least 1,500 more would be in those programs.
Black male students in the Orange public schools in 2004/5 were allowed to participate in Mathematics and Science Advanced Placement courses at a rate of about one-fifth or less than that of White, non-Hispanic male students.