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According to the US Census Bureau (2010), 27.2% of the US population have a bachelor's degree or higher.
It is hard to put a number on home schooled students who graduate college. People apply at different times for college and many attend community college.
About 70% do,, but only 25% finish college.
I do not think it depends on the race to graduate college, but rather the individual.
Graduate Highschool or College. Some sports require you have to take some College years and others allow you to go straight from high school.
about 568,900,000 people will graduate from U.S. colleges every year
Twenty US Presidents did not graduate college. Out of those 20, eight never went to college and 12 did not finish.
The closest figure I could find is that as of the 2000 Census 44,460,000 people in the US have a college education. An estimate would be that about a million people a year graduate from college.
IDK How many graduate, But I was one of them, & Now I'm in college :)
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It depends on which Wheaton College you're talking about. At Wheaton College in Illinois, there are 2,366 undergraduate students and 549 graduate students. At Wheaton College in Massachusetts, there are 1,655 undergraduate students and no graduate students.
Many people start college straight out of high school. For the majority of students, that is eighteen years of age.
In TX, you should be able to graduate even at 15 if you have ALL your credits. I assume this is from a public school. If the young person wishes to enter a jr college, she/he could also get a GED and start at a community college. There have been many cases of young people entering college below 17. We have such a ruling in Midland TX.