Observation:
2023: 90.1 (+ more) Updated: Sep 12, 2024 9:12 AM CDT2023: | 90.1 | |
2022: | 90.4 | |
2021: | 89.7 | |
2020: | 89.7 | |
2019: | 88.0 | |
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Units:
Percent,Frequency:
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Release: Educational Attainment
Units: Percent, Not Seasonally Adjusted
Frequency: Annual
Estimate of educational attainment for population 18 years old and over 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 (ACS variable S1501_C02_014E from table S1501). People who reported completing the 12th grade but not receiving a diploma are not included.
For more information about the subject definitions, see the ACS technical documentation.
Data for 2020 are based on the experimental estimates from the 1-year American Community Survey released by the Census Bureau instead of the traditional 1-year estimates. For more information, visit the 2020 ACS 1-Year Experimental Data Release page.
Single-year estimates from the American Community Survey (ACS) are "period" estimates derived from a data sample collected over a period of time, as opposed to "point-in-time" estimates such as those from past decennial censuses. ACS single-year estimates include data collected over a 12-month period; explicitly the calendar year (e.g., the 2015 ACS covers the period from January 2015 through December 2015).
Please see the ACS handbook (Section 3, "Understanding and Using ACS Single-Year and Multiyear Estimates" p. 13) for a comprehensive set of details and clarifications.
U.S. Census Bureau, High School Graduate or Higher for Tennessee [GCT1501TN], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GCT1501TN, .