Ohio Department of Education sources of info:
Past Toledo Talk report card threads:
Report cards released in August for the previous school year:
Adequate Yearly Progress
To meet the federal AYP requirements, every student group must be at or above the annual goals or make improvement over last year. Graduation or attendance goals must be met for the district as a whole.
Performance Index Score
The Performance Index Score reflects the achievement of every tested student. The score is a weighted average of all tested subjects in grades 3-8 and 10. The most weight is given to the advanced students (1.2), and the weights decrease for each performance level. This creates a scale of 0 to 120 points, with 100 being the goal. Looking at the Performance Index Score over time shows trends in district achievement.
PI over time :
If only looking at the number of academic standards TPS met, which was 5 of 30, TPS would be rated Academic Emergency. But the state provides a couple of chances for the poor peforming school districts to appear to be doing better than they really are. That would be AYP and PI.
If a school district is Academic Emergency based upon the number of indicators met, but the district meets AYP, the lowest the district can be rated is Continuous Improvement. This is how TPS got the Continuous Improvement rating after the 2004 and 2005 report cards.
If a school district is Academic Emergency based upon the number of indicators met, and the district fails to meet AYP, but the district scores at least an 80.0 on the PI, the lowest the district can be rated is Continous Improvement. This was TPS's situation last year when TPS did not meet AYP but scored 80.4 on the PI. A year ago, TPS was 0.5 away from Academic Watch.
I have not yet found the rating definitions for the 2006-2007 report card. All I could find on the ODE Web site was 2005-2006 info:
2005-2006 Ohio School District Rating Definitions
Excerpts:
The 2005-2006 designations [ for districts] are determined according to the text and list below:
An Academic Watch or Emergency district or school gets to move up one designation by improving the performance index score over time. An improvement of 10 points in two years with at least three points coming in the most recent year moves a school or district up one designation in the current year.
Schools receive their designations, in part, based on the percentage of indicators that apply to their school (rather than out of 25 as indicated for districts).
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 3rd Grade Reading Achievement Test (2006-07) 65.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 3rd Grade Reading Achievement Test (2005-06) 57.7
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 3rd Grade Reading Achievement Test (2004-05) 66.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 3rd Grade Math Achievement Test (2006-07) 67.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 3rd Grade Math Achievement Test (2005-06) 56.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 3rd Grade Math Achievement Test (2004-05) 47.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2006-07) 65.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2005-06) 60.3
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2004-05) 62.9
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Math Achievement Test (2006-07) 57.9
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Math Achievement Test (2005-06) 40.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Writing Achievement Test (2006-07) 74.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Writing Achievement Test (2005-06) 74.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 4th Grade Writing Achievement Test (2004-05) 65.5
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2006-07) 64.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2005-06) 57.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2004-05) 59.5
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Math Achievement Test (2006-07) 41.3
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Math Achievement Test (2005-06) 40.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Social Studies Achievement Test (2006-07) 39.6
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 5th Grade Science Achievement Test (2006-07) 46.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 6th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2006-07) 57.0
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 6th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2005-06) 71.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 6th Grade Math Achievement Test (2006-07) 49.9
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 6th Grade Math Achievement Test (2005-06) 46.1
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 7th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2006-07) 51.5
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 7th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2005-06) 56.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 7th Grade Math Achievement Test (2006-07) 39.7
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 7th Grade Math Achievement Test (2005-06) 36.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 7th Grade Math Achievement Test (2004-05) 28.6
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 7th Grade Writing Achievement Test (2006-07) 63.4
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2006-07) 59.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2005-06) 53.2
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Reading Achievement Test (2004-05) 55.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Math Achievement Test (2006-07) 41.1
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Math Achievement Test (2005-06) 36.0
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Math Achievement Test (2004-05) 25.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Social Studies Achievement Test (2006-07) 21.8
Percentage of Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the 8th Grade Science Achievement Test (2006-07) 30.9
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Social Studies Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 63.7
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Social Studies Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 64.6
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Social Studies Ohio Graduation Test (2004-05) 67.9
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Math Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 64.9
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Math Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 63.4
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Math Ohio Graduation Test (2004-05) 70.3
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Reading Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 78.6
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Reading Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 80.4
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Reading Ohio Graduation Test (2004-05) 90.6
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Writing Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 85.2
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Writing Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 79.1
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Writing Achievement Test (2004-05) 82.7
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Science Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 54.2
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Science Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 50.3
Percentage of 10th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Science Ohio Graduation Test (2004-05) 52.9
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Social Studies Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 80.5
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Social Studies Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 81.8
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Math Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 80.8
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Math Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 86.1
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Reading Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 88.3
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Reading Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 92.6
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Writing Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 89.2
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Writing Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 91.2
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Science Ohio Graduation Test (2006-07) 70.9
Percentage of 11th Grade Students Who Scored Proficient or Higher on the Science Ohio Graduation Test (2005-06) 74.2
Student Attendance Rate (2006-07) 92.3
Student Attendance Rate (2005-06) 93.2
Student Attendance Rate (2004-05) 93.2
Student Graduation Rate (2005-06) 90.5
Student Graduation Rate (2004-05) 80.2
Student Graduation Rate (2003-04) 76.6
District Performance Index Score (2006-07) 79.1
District Performance Index Score (2005-06) 80.4
District Performance Index Score (2004-05) 76.5
District's AYP Determination (2006-07 applied to school year 2007-08) Not Met
A school district's 2006-2007 rating and the number of academic indicators met out of a possible 30:
| District Name | Rating | Standards Met | AYP | PI Score |
| Archbold-Area | Excellent | 29 | Met | 103.9 |
| Evergreen | Excellent | 29 | Met | 100.1 |
| Gorham Fayette | Effective | 23 | Not Met | 96.7 |
| Pettisville | Excellent | 29 | Met | 106.2 |
| Pike-Delta-York | Effective | 26 | Met | 97.4 |
| Swanton | Effective | 21 | Met | 94.1 |
| Wauseon | Excellent | 28 | Not Met | 100.5 |
| District Name | Rating | Standards Met | AYP Met | PI Score |
| Anthony Wayne | Excellent | 29 | Met | 101.6 |
| Maumee | Effective | 26 | Not Met | 98.7 |
| Oregon | Effective | 24 | Met | 95.2 |
| Ottawa Hills | Excellent | 30 | Met | 108.5 |
| Springfield | Effective | 25 | Met | 96.1 |
| Sylvania | Excellent | 29 | Not Met | 102.2 |
| Toledo | Academic Watch | 5 | Not Met | 79.1 |
| Washington Local | Effective | 22 | Not Met | 94.3 |
| District Name | Rating | Standards Met | AYP Met | PI Score |
| Benton Carroll Salem | Effective | 26 | Not Met | 97.1 |
| Danbury | Effective | 23 | Met | 94.6 |
| Genoa Area | Effective | 24 | Met | 95.6 |
| Port Clinton | Continuous Improvement | 24 | Not Met | 95.2 |
| Put-In-Bay | Effective | 2 | Met | 98.5 |
| District Name | Rating | Standards Met | AYP Met | PI Score |
| Bowling Green | Effective | 28 | Not Met | 99 |
| Eastwood | Effective | 27 | Not Met | 99.8 |
| Elmwood | Effective | 25 | Not Met | 95.7 |
| Lake | Effective | 20 | Met | 92 |
| North Baltimore | Effective | 21 | Not Met | 92.7 |
| Northwood | Effective | 28 | Not Met | 97.8 |
| Otsego | Effective | 24 | Met | 95.9 |
| Perrysburg | Excellent | 29 | Not Met | 103.1 |
| Rossford | Effective | 22 | Not Met | 95.2 |
Aug 14, 2007 Blade story
| Building Name | Rating |
| Allied Health Academy High School | Continuous Improvement |
| Arlington Elementary | Effective |
| Arts and Media Academy High School | Academic Watch |
| Beverly Elementary | Excellent |
| Birmingham Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Bowsher High School | Effective |
| BTI Academy High School | Academic Watch |
| Burroughs Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Byrnedale Junior High | Continuous Improvement |
| Chase Elementary | Academic Emergency |
| Cherry Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Cowboy Academy of Business High School | Continuous Improvement |
| Crossgates Elementary | Effective |
| Cummings-Zucker High School | Academic Emergency |
| DeVeaux Junior High | Academic Watch |
| East Side Central Elementary | Academic Watch |
| East Toledo Junior High | Continuous Improvement |
| Edgewater Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Ella P. Stewart Academy Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Elmhurst Elementary | Effective |
| Fulton Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Garfield Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Gateway Academy High School | Academic Watch |
| Glendale-Feilbach Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Grove Patterson Academy Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Hale Elementary | Academic Emergency |
| Harvard Elementary | Excellent |
| Hawkins Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Human Services Academy High School | Academic Emergency |
| Humanities Academy High School | Academic Watch |
| Jones Junior High | Academic Emergency |
| Keyser Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Lagrange Elementary | Academic Emergency |
| Larchmont Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Leverette Junior High | Academic Emergency |
| Libbey High School | Not Rated |
| Lincoln Academy for Boys Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Longfellow Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Marshall Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Mckinley Elementary | Academic Watch |
| McTigue Junior High | Academic Watch |
| Navarre Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Newbury Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Oakdale Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Old Orchard Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Old West End Academy Elementary | Effective |
| Ottawa River Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Pickett Elementary | Academic Emergency |
| Raymer Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Reynolds Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Riverside Elementary | Continuous Improvement |
| Robinson Junior High | Academic Emergency |
| Rogers High School | Continuous Improvement |
| Scott High School | Not Rated |
| Sherman Elementary | Academic Emergency |
| SMART Academy High School | Continuous Improvement |
| Start High School | Effective |
| Toledo Technology Academy High School | Excellent |
| Waite High School | Continuous Improvement |
| Walbridge Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Whittier Elementary | Academic Watch |
| Woodward High School | Academic Watch |
Building Totals
FY04 data posted by historymike.
| District | FY05 | FY06 |
| Archbold-Area | $8,818 | $9,800 |
| Evergreen | $8,242 | $8,436 |
| Gorham Fayette | $9,184 | $10,246 |
| Pettisville | $7,530 | $8,390 |
| Pike-Delta-York | $8,094 | $8,883 |
| Swanton | $7,077 | $8,135 |
| Wauseon | $6,637 | $7,234 |
| District | FY05 | FY06 |
| Anthony Wayne | $7,923 | $8,169 |
| Maumee | $10,116 | $10,022 |
| Oregon | $9,678 | $10,979 |
| Ottawa Hills | $11,504 | $11,639 |
| Springfield | $8,977 | $8,912 |
| Sylvania | $8,980 | $9,400 |
| Toledo | $10,604 | $11,202 |
| Washington Local | $9,682 | $9,993 |
| District | FY05 | FY06 |
| Benton Carroll Salem | $9,374 | $9,900 |
| Danbury | $12,417 | $12,028 |
| Genoa Area | $6,975 | $7,933 |
| Port Clinton | $10,155 | $10,793 |
| Put-In-Bay | $23,090 | $25,749 |
| District | FY05 | FY06 |
| Bowling Green | $9,346 | $10,180 |
| Eastwood | $8,265 | $8,414 |
| Elmwood | $7,727 | $8,560 |
| Lake | $6,824 | $6,720 |
| North Baltimore | $8,319 | $8,946 |
| Northwood | $9,151 | $9,076 |
| Otsego | $7,837 | $8,123 |
| Perrysburg | $8,582 | $9,194 |
| Rossford | $10,516 | $10,816 |
Source from the Expenditure and Revenue data page at the ODE Web site.
From a Sep 13, 2004 Toledo Talk posting titled Teacher's pay that pointed to a Blade Sep 13, 2004 story titled Teachers' pay varies widely by district
My comments about the Blade story, which posted its salary info in an image that was in the newspaper but is not on the Web site.
From the Blade story:
There is a stark difference between the starting salaries paid to teachers in public schools versus parochial schools. College graduates who get a job teaching at a Catholic school will earn much less, said Jack Altenburger, superintendent of education for the Toledo Catholic Diocese. Catholic high schools in the metro Toledo area paid an average starting salary of $24,506 last year. On the elementary-school level, the average starting pay was $20,925.
"Overall, our goal has to be 75 to 80 percent of what the local [public] district pays," Mr. Altenburger said. "On average, our schools pay 65 to 70 [percent] of what the public school district pays."
Michigan teachers on average took home nearly $10,000 more than their Ohio counterparts. The average teacher salary in that state was $54,020 for the 2002-03 school year, which was the second-highest in the nation behind California.From a Jun 29, 2004 Toledo Talk thread titled More evidence that parents are at fault? that pointed to a Jun 26, 2004 Blade story titled Bulk of TPS students ignore free test help
Free test help? I don't think so. Taxpayers paid for the "free" help that went mostly ignored by the students/parents. From the 2004 Blade story:
At the East Toledo school, about 15 students are attending a three-week, half-day summer session focusing on all areas of the test. An additional 20 students took advantage of some before and after-school tutoring in March and April, with another 30 students in Saturday sessions during February, said Robin Wheatley, assistant principal of curriculum and instruction. But those 70 students were among hundreds invited.
"I was extremely disappointed," Miss Wheatley said. "I sent letters to the parents saying, 'Your student refused to be tutored.'"
Teachers called parents at all times of the day to inform them about the free summer session and sent letters explaining the test and the extra help students could get.
At Scott High School, about 46 of the roughly 180 invited students attended the summer sessions that focused on mathematics and reading, said Jose Hernandez, the summer program coordinator. "We send out a letter to parents. We call parents. We talk to parents at freshman meetings," he said. "We have incentive packages - T-shirts and things like that. Right now, we're getting the kids who really want to improve."What about applying that same line of thinking to public schools? Why focus only on charters?
These people who want poor-performing charters to shut down, are they also demanding that poor-performing public schools be closed, and the students given vouchers to go elsewhere?
When the anti-education crowd wants a charter to close, they are pretending to care about a child's education. But where is their concern when it comes to poor-performing public schools?
The same anti-education crowd that wants charters to close are also opposed to vouchers. The anti-education crowd would prefer students remain in poor-performing public schools without ever having a chance at a better education. The anti-education crowd opposes school-choice.
Look at the explanation for Toledo's failing public schools:
So new programs are needed for the failing public schools, but for charters, the answer is to close them. Some charters are also serving kids from low-income families. And apparently, some charters are serving kids who were ignored by TPS, especially special-needs children.
From a Jul 10, 2007 Toledo Journal story
The IEP idea sounds good. My question is, why hasn't TPS been doing this all along? Is the purpose of Ford's IEP idea meant to enable TPS to compete with the charters who are serving the special needs children who are currently ignored by TPS?
Dec 20, 2006 Toledo Talk thread titled School voucher program expanded that pointed to a Dec 20, 2006 Blade story.
The following school buildings have been in academic emergency or academic watch for two of the last three years, making their students eligible to apply for vouchers:
TOLEDO
Chase Elementary
Cherry Elementary *
Fulton Elementary
Garfield Elementary
Nathan Hale Elementary *
Jones Elementary
Lagrange Elementary
Leverette Elementary
Libbey High
Lincoln Academy for Boys
McTigue Junior High
Newbury Elementary
Pickett Elementary *
Raymer Elementary
Reynolds Elementary
Robinson Junior High
Scott High *
Sherman Elementary
Woodward High *
(*) Currently in program
SOURCE: Ohio Department of Education
[T]hree-quarters of Ohio's 14,000 school vouchers [went] unused in the program's inaugural year.Instead of attacking the voucher program and attacking charter schools, the anti-education crowd should ask intelligent, common sense questions like:
You don't have to worry about the voucher program if a school building is not continually failing. You don't have to worry about charter schools if ALL TPS students are being educated.
created by jr on Aug 15, 2007 at 09:38:57 pm
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current date: 20-Nov-2008 12:26 P.M.