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Dropouts flock to GEDs

Employers today can afford to be particular and dropouts are learning this lesson first hand.

High School General Equivalency Diploma


With the job market tightening, the unemployment rate for people lacking a high school diploma reached 15.6 percent in August. It was 9.7 percent for high school graduates without any college.

This is one of the reasons adult-education centers are being flooded with students seeking General Education Diplomas (GED). In 2008, the number of high school dropouts seeking a GED swelled to 777,000, up 6.6 percent nationwide. In some areas, the increase in GED seekers was 20 percent higher than the year before.

Reasons for seeking a GED included job search, general education and social reasons. About 7 percent wanted to qualify to join the military.

The GED is accepted by most state colleges, universities and technical schools in lieu of a high-school diploma and it is in this area that experts say it is most valuable. GED students with some post-secondary education can improve their earning power significantly. However, two recent studies suggest those who hold a GED still do not significantly improve their earning power compared to high school dropouts.

Thanks to state and federal programs, getting a GED can be very inexpensive or even free.

Posted Tuesday Nov 03