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Valley behind national education levels
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- Published on 03/29/2012 - 1:35 pm
- Written by Business Journal staff
College class (AP Photo)The Central Valley sits well below the national average of those who have college degrees, a new report by the Lumina Foundation showed.
According to the report, "A Stronger Nation Through Higher Education," 38.3 percent of working-age Americans (ages 25-64) held a two- or four-year college degree in 2010.
That's up from 2009 when the rate was 38.1 percent and 2008 when the rate was 37.9 percent.
Fresno, in the bottom 10 cities by degree attainment, had a rate of 28.71 percent, although that's still above other California cities like Riverside at 27.54, Stockton at 26.11 percent and Bakersfield at 21.33 percent.
By county, Fresno County came in at 28.55 percent, Tulare County at 20.97 percent, Madera County at 20.12 percent and Kings County with the lowest in the state at 19.84 percent. Marin County had the highest rate in the state by far at 62.08 percent.
San Francisco fared among the top ten cities by degree attainment with a rate of 52.91 percent along with San Diego at 43.95 percent.
California had a degree completion rate of 38.6 percent in 2010, up from 38.7 percent in 2009 and 38.6 in 2008.
The Lumina Foundation, a private foundation that works to promote higher education in the U.S., is striving to make its Goal 2025 a reality by seeing to it that 60 percent of working-age have degrees by 2025.
California would need 13.3 million graduates by that year to achieve a 60-percent rate, the report showed. At current conditions, the state is only projected to reach 43.4 percent with 9.6 million graduates.





