New Jersey Reports Gains in Graduation, Dual Enrollment and Career Readiness Measures

The state education department said the latest statewide data show improvement in several school performance indicators, while chronic absenteeism and discipline remain above pre-pandemic levels.

MORRISTOWN, NJ – New Jersey schools reported improvements in graduation rates, dual enrollment, industry credentials and other college-and-career readiness measures in the latest statewide performance data, according to the New Jersey Department of Education. The department released the figures May 7, 2026, using data from the 2024-2025 school year, the most recent available.

The state’s 2025 graduation rate reached 91.8%, up from 90.9% four years earlier. Graduation rates also increased for students with disabilities, from 79% to 82.4%, and for economically disadvantaged students, from 84.8% to 88.9%, over the same period.

The department also reported growth in programs tied to college credit, language proficiency and career credentials. In 2024-2025, 30% of 11th and 12th graders took dual enrollment courses, up from 22.3% four years earlier. The number of students earning the Seal of Biliteracy rose by 155% over four years, while 12,741 students earned industry-valued credentials, a 244% increase.

New Jersey also ranked No. 1 nationally in AP course offerings, with 93.5% of public high schools offering at least one AP course and 86.2% offering five or more, according to the department. The state ranked sixth nationally for the 10-year increase in the percentage of Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino students taking AP exams while in high school.

The same data show challenges remain. New Jersey’s 14.4% chronic absenteeism rate for 2024-2025 was below the estimated national rate of 22%, but it has not returned to the state’s pre-pandemic level of 10.6% in 2018-2019. Schools also reported 56,564 in-school and out-of-school suspensions and 29,829 incidents involving violence, vandalism, substance abuse, harassment, intimidation or bullying.

The Department of Education said updated School Performance Reports with detailed school-level and district-level data will be posted online in the coming weeks. That release will give Morristown-area families and districts a clearer look at how local schools compare with the statewide trends.

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