In the next decade the number of high school graduates in Minnesota will:
Incorrect
Correct!
High school graduates will decline 10 percent by 2015. View source.
In ten years the number of students of color who complete high school will:
Graduates of color in Minnesota will increase 40 percent. (White graduates will decrease 17 percent. Total graduates will decrease 10 percent.) View source.
By 2015, the number of college degrees awarded annually in Minnesota will be:
By 2015 we will produce 13,000 fewer college-educated workers than the total annual demand arising from new job creation and the need to replace retiring workers. View source.
The average yearly income difference between Minnesotans with a high school diploma only and those with a four-year college degree is:
Full-time workers aged 25-34 with a four-year college degree earn an average of $19,000 more each year than workers with a high school diploma only. View source.
The percentage of Minnesota high school graduates who enroll in college right after high school is:
66 percent of Minnesota's 2005 high school graduates attended college the following fall. View source.
64,000 is the number of people who:
64,000 Minnesotans graduated from high school in 2005. View source. [30,000 received a bachelor's degree from a Minnesota institution, 87,000 live in Duluth, 128,000 are under correctional supervision.]