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  1. Data: 2019-2023 American Community Survey accessed via API using tidycensus package in R
    Tools: R (packages: dplyr, ggplot2, sf, usmap, tools, ggfx, grid, scales)

  2. Funny thing about oregon is that percentage is about the same as the percent of people that graduate high school.

    I exaggerate, but it’s bad.

  3. eatingpotatochips on

    Probably an instance where excluding DC would be appropriate, since it is just an urban area, whereas even states like MA have some areas which aren’t urban.

  4. MasterOfBarterTown on

    Wyoming exports kids, many after getting a degree. A lot of those end up on the front range of Colorado.

  5. MasterOfBarterTown on

    I see a lot of this due to the influx of young, degreed people from other states. So, Illinois has the Chicago financial industry. Colorado has Denver and its outliers. Utah has a lifestyle location to draw programmers, etc. Virginia – college centers and US Federal workers? Georgia has HBCU grads relocating to Atlanta? Massachusetts has finance and insurance (and more – as well as the nation’s leader in secondary education outcomes).

    But why is Vermont’s percentage so high? Also, the same question applies to Minnesota (I’m assuming a lifestyle choice which helps businesses recruit).

  6. I-Like-Women-Boobs on

    As someone who regularly visits West Virginia and has a lot of family there, it’s not surprising in the slightest that they’re at the bottom.

  7. I graduated as the valedictorian of my high school in Arkansas which provided me tuition free college (from Walmart – they made us write yearly thank you letters) at an Arkansas state college. I am grateful for that!

    As soon as I graduated with my bachelor’s degree, I jumped on a plane and moved to Maryland. That has been one of the best decision of my life!

  8. Colorado only has 5 million people, it is a state with large numbers of tech engineers and mining/ag engineering, so that inflates us a bit in percentages.

  9. Miqo_Nekomancer on

    Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama are all remaining true to form, I see.

  10. Something tells me that DC would probably be in-line with other Northeastern cities if you considered only the municipal boundary, not the state.

  11. I’m gonna be honest, this seems really high even for the low states. Do even 30% of adults above 18 go to college, let alone graduate?

  12. eta_carinae_311 on

    San Miguel county is where Telluride is located and Pitkin has Aspen, which are both known rich people places but I’m still kind of surprised to see them in the top 10. You’d think Boulder at least would have made it, I wonder if it’s because of the university and how many people are students not graduates? interesting

  13. This chart is probably a bit misleading. I grew up in the south and got a bachelors degree in computer science. I moved out west after graduating since that’s where the job market is.

    I also know a lot of people that graduated with bachelors and masters that did the same. Plenty of educated people there, but you have to go where the market is for the degree you have.

  14. ConfidentSuspect4125 on

    Interesting that this map is almost a duplicate of politicial red and blue states. I wonder which ones are most educated?