In education, big numbers usually move slowly.
A point here. Two points there. Maybe a five-point jump after years of work.
A 41-point increase?
That’s not a trend. That’s a transformation.
Between 2015 and 2025, Putnam County School District in Florida raised its graduation rate from 54.9% to 96.6% — the largest documented increase in the United States during that period.
Ten years ago, nearly half of students were not graduating on time. Today, the district is approaching universal graduation.
This didn’t happen by accident.
It happened by design.
In 2015, Putnam County had one of the lowest graduation rates in Florida. When Superintendent Dr. Rick Surrency stepped into the role, the challenge was clear and urgent: more than four in ten seniors were not finishing high school on time.
For many districts, numbers like that feel overwhelming. The problems are complex. The barriers are real. The path forward can feel unclear.
But Putnam County chose to treat the challenge as solvable.
Not quickly. Not easily. But intentionally.
The district didn’t rely on a single initiative or a silver-bullet program. Instead, they built a system focused on visibility, accountability, and support.
Key moves included:
Graduation Coaches
Dedicated staff were tasked specifically with helping students stay on track. Their job was simple in theory but powerful in practice: know the students, know their progress, and intervene early.
Relentless Progress Monitoring
Student performance and credit accumulation were tracked closely. The district focused on catching problems early—long before senior year.
Family Engagement
Parents and guardians became active partners in the graduation journey. Communication increased. Expectations became clearer. Support became more accessible.
This wasn’t a one-year push. It was a decade of sustained focus.
And the results began to compound.
By 2021, Putnam County’s graduation rate reached 92.5%, already the largest increase in Florida at the time.
But the work didn’t stop when the numbers looked good.
The Class of 2025 pushed the district even further, reaching a 96.6% graduation rate — the highest in district history and a record-breaking figure in Florida.
Over ten years, the district gained 41.7 percentage points.
To put that in perspective:
State-level improvements across the country typically range from 13–20 points
District-level gains highlighted nationally often fall between 5–20 points
Even major statewide improvements rarely exceed 20 points
Putnam County more than doubled those benchmarks.
This story isn’t just about Putnam County.
It’s about what happens when a district commits to long-term, system-wide change.
The lesson isn’t that every district can replicate the exact same path. Every community is different. Every student population is unique.
The lesson is that dramatic improvement is possible when graduation becomes a shared, measurable priority across the entire system.
Not a goal on paper.
A goal in practice.
Graduation rates are more than a statistic. They are a signal.
A signal of systems working.
Of students being seen.
Of supports being aligned.
Of communities staying engaged long enough to see change happen.
Putnam County’s decade-long journey shows what sustained leadership, consistent monitoring, and community partnership can achieve.
And perhaps most importantly, it shows that even the most challenging starting points do not define a district’s future.