Report: Heavily Latino Cities Named Least Educated in U.S.

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Latinos have historically lagged behind whites in education.

They have made strides, like a declining dropout rate and increased college enrollment, but are still more disconnected (not in school, not working) and lag in college completion.

latina girl graduate graduatingEducation is key to health, income, and the economy. That’s why the financial website WalletHub analyzed 150 U.S. metro regions with nine factors—like public school quality and college graduate rates—to find the “most educated” and “least educated” areas.

Unfortunately, the five least-educated areas were all heavily Latino.

The McAllen-Edinburg-Mission metro area in South Texas (85.77% Latino) was the least educated city in the country. The area came in 150th on the Educational Attainment and 104th on the Quality of Education & Attainment Gap metrics.

The bottom five included the Brownsville-Harlingen, TX (90.1% Latino), Visalia-Porterville, CA (47.56%), Bakersfield, CA (47.45%), and Modesto, CA (37.54%) metro areas.

grad ratesConversely, the most-educated areas had low Latino populations.

Ann Arbor, MI (4.44% Latino), home to the University of Michigan, was named the most educated in the United States. Ann Arbor ranked first in both Educational Attainment and the Quality of Education & Attainment Gap metrics.

Rounding out the top-five are the Washington, DC-Arlington, VA-Alexandria, MD, (12.26% Latino) followed by San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA (30.99%), Durham-Chapel Hill, NC (12.36%), and Madison, WI (7%) metro areas.

Madison had the highest number of high school graduates living in the area, while McAllen-Edinburg-Mission had the least.

These statistics point to the need for increased investment in education, and programs to increase Latino and minorities’ entry and completion of college, experts say.

“As the U.S. faces a huge demographic shift, its education system will need to attract, retain, and graduate individuals from backgrounds that are decidedly underrepresented on colege and university campuses,” Gabriel R. Serna, a professor at Virgina Polytechnic Institute and State University, told WalletHub.

By The Numbers By The Numbers

84

percent

of Latino parents support public funding for afterschool programs

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