Indiana Educational attainment - persons 25 years and over - percent high school graduate or higher by City

Data Item State
High school graduate or higher, percent of persons age 25 years+, 2014-2018 - (Percent)
City Value
Anderson 85.6
Angola 86.8
Auburn 91.5
Avon 94.1
Batesville 92.4
Bedford 88.9
Beech Grove 87.1
Bloomington 92.4
Bluffton 91.3
Boonville 87.3
Brazil 88.1
Bright 92.7
Brownsburg 91.7
Carmel 98.0
Cedar Lake 90.1
Charlestown 83.0
Chesterton 94.0
Clarksville 86.1
Columbia City 90.9
Columbus 92.2
Connersville 79.0
Crawfordsville 85.7
Crown Point 91.8
Cumberland 91.0
Danville 91.5
Decatur 87.7
Dunlap 91.2
Dyer 94.9
East Chicago 70.7
Elkhart 76.4
Ellettsville 90.3
Elwood 83.9
Evansville 86.9
Fort Wayne 88.5
Frankfort 78.1
Franklin 89.9
Garrett 86.6
Gary 85.0
Gas City 87.2
Goshen 78.1
Granger 97.2
Greencastle 88.3
Greenfield 91.0
Greensburg 91.4
Greenwood 90.9
Griffith 93.9
Grissom AFB 88.4
Hammond 81.0
Hartford City 87.0
Hidden Valley 94.5
Highland 93.9
Hobart 90.0
Huntingburg 79.5
Huntington 88.4
Jasper 91.2
Jeffersonville 91.1
Kendallville 80.7
Kokomo 86.4
La Porte 85.7
Lafayette 88.1
Lake Station 77.3
Lakes of the Four Seasons 96.0
Lawrence 86.7
Lawrenceburg 88.2
Lebanon 85.9
Linton 84.0
Logansport 75.8
Lowell 89.9
Madison 89.6
Marion 83.9
Martinsville 81.7
Merrillville 90.6
Michigan City 86.2
Mishawaka 87.9
Monticello 86.1
Mooresville 87.3
Mount Vernon 87.7
Muncie 86.6
Munster 95.1
Nappanee 86.9
New Albany 85.0
New Castle 88.5
New Haven 88.1
New Whiteland 92.2
Noblesville 94.7
North Manchester 88.7
North Vernon 82.2
Notre Dame 98.1
Peru 83.3
Plainfield 92.6
Plymouth 79.5
Portage 88.9
Portland 80.9
Princeton 88.0
Rensselaer 82.6
Richmond 84.3
Rochester 91.1
Rushville 81.8
Salem 77.3
Schererville 93.8
Scottsburg 85.5
Sellersburg 87.7
Seymour 83.6
Shelbyville 82.9
South Bend 84.0
South Haven 88.9
Speedway 87.2
St. John 96.3
Tell City 90.5
Terre Haute 85.0
Tipton 84.9
Valparaiso 94.7
Vincennes 83.8
Wabash 85.3
Warsaw 85.3
Washington 78.3
West Lafayette 95.7
Westville 80.0
Yorktown 94.7
Zionsville 97.8

Data item: High school graduate or higher, percent of persons age 25 years+, 2014-2018

Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS) and Puerto Rico Community Survey (PRCS), 5-Year Estimates. The PRCS is part of the Census Bureau's ACS, customized for Puerto Rico. Both Surveys are updated every year.

Definition

High School Graduates include people whose highest degree was a high school diploma or its equivalent, people who attended college but did not receive a degree, and people who received an associate's, bachelor's, master's, or professional or doctorate degree. People who reported completing the 12th grade but not receiving a diploma are not included. Persons with a Bachelor's Degree or Higher are those who have received a bachelor's degree from a college or university, or a master's, professional, or doctorate degree. For the complete definition, go to ACS subject definitions "Educational Attainment."

These data include only persons 25 years old and over. The percentages are obtained by dividing the counts of graduates by the total number of persons 25 years old and over.

Source and Accuracy

This Fact is based on data collected in the American Community Survey (ACS) and the Puerto Rico Community Survey (PRCS) conducted annually by the U.S. Census Bureau. A sample of over 3.5 million housing unit addresses is interviewed each year over a 12 month period. This Fact (estimate) is based on five years of ACS and PRCS sample data and describes the average value of person, household and housing unit characteristics over this period of collection.

Statistics from all surveys are subject to sampling and nonsampling error. Sampling error is the uncertainty between an estimate based on a sample and the corresponding value that would be obtained if the estimate were based on the entire population (as from a census). Measures of sampling error are provided in the form of margins of error for all estimates included with ACS and PRCS published products. The Census Bureau recommends that data users incorporate this information into their analyses, as sampling error in survey estimates could impact the conclusions drawn from the results. The data for each geographic area are presented together with margins of error at Using margins of errors. A more detailed explanation of margins of error and a demonstration of how to use them is provided below.

For more information on sampling and estimation methodology, confidentiality, and sampling and nonsampling errors, please see the Multiyear Accuracy (US) and the Multiyear Accuracy (Puerto Rico) documents at "Documentation - Accuracy of the data."

Margin of Error

As mentioned above, ACS estimates are based on a sample and are subject to sampling error. The margin of error measures the degree of uncertainty caused by sampling error. The margin of error is used with an ACS estimate to construct a confidence interval about the estimate. The interval is formed by adding the margin of error to the estimate (the upper bound) and subtracting the margin of error from the estimate (the lower bound). It is expected with 90 percent confidence that the interval will contain the full population value of the estimate. The following example is for demonstrating purposes only. Suppose the ACS reported that the percentage of people in a state who were 25 years and older with a bachelor's degree was 21.3 percent and that the margin of error associated with this estimate was 0.7 percent. By adding and subtracting the margin of error from the estimate, we calculate the 90-percent confidence interval for this estimate:

21.3% - 0.7% = 20.6% => Lower-bound estimate
21.3% + 0.7% = 22.0% => Upper-bound estimate

Therefore, we can be 90 percent confident that the percent of the population 25 years and older having a bachelor's degree in a state falls somewhere between 20.6 percent and 22.0 percent.

For this Fact, its estimates and margins of error along with percents and percent margins of errors can be found on American Community Survey, Data Profiles-Social Characteristics

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