schools that serve low - income students (84 %
average enrollment in the 39 schools, compared to 75 % enrollment city - wide)
Between the 2010 — 2011 and 2011 — 2012 school years,
average enrollment in the schools we studied remained stable (381.3 to 379.7 students — Table 1).
Not exact matches
Chriss pegs growth
in the contingent work force to structural changes
in employment over the past decades, including a decline
in enrollment in defined - benefit pension plans and growth
in the
average duration of unemployment.
The calculation is a weighted
average dollar savings across loan terms and assumes no change
in interest rates, on - time payments,
enrollment in ACH, and no pre-payment of loans.
To be eligible for PNC Private Client, you'll need $ 50,000 or more
in combined
average monthly balances
in your active personal checking, savings, money market accounts and certificates of deposit (excluding any IRA Deposit products) using the most current statement period balance (s) at the time of
enrollment.
Kinderhook, N.Y. November 1, 2016... With open
enrollment for Obamacare beginning today, voters should know that its rates are skyrocketing for New York's struggling middle class: They'll go up another 16.6 percent on
average in New York and upwards of 25 percent elsewhere, yet liberal New York City professor and NY - 19 congressional candidate Zephyr Teachout wants to expand the failing program even more, the campaign of fiscally responsible congressional candidate John Faso today noted.
The U.F.T. report found that
in Manhattan's District 5, for example, English language learners make up 6 percent of the charter school
enrollment compared to the district
average of 14 percent.
Ossining for Fair Funding Communications Director Jessica Vecchiarelli said: «With significant
enrollment growth and substantial increases
in student needs, we are simply asking that Ossining be put on a path to being funded at the same percentage level as the
average district
in New York State, at least 80 % of the fully phased -
in Foundation Aid.
Twelve months after
enrollment results of the study showed no significant changes
in average weight loss for participants
in any of the four groups.
Community health centers
in the restrictive states had significantly more limited outreach and
enrollment resources and had significantly fewer
enrollment staff (an
average of three full - time
enrollment staff
in restrictive states compared to six
in full implementation states.)
In the seven years prior to when Catholic leaders decided to close and reopen their schools as charters,
average enrollment dropped from 299 students to 153 students.
After that switch,
enrollment climbed to an
average of 214 students
in the first year and 242 students
in the second year.
Enrollment in state - financed prekindergarten programs has increased nationwide, but
average spending per child appears to be dropping, according to a report.
By comparison,
enrollment of whites
in Head Start at age five was much lower (2 percent), and the change
in enrollment after the
average funding initiative close to zero.
We collected college transcript data for all students
in the sample, allowing us to examine the relationship between exam scores and several different outcomes, including grade point
average (GPA) and
enrollment in remedial courses.
This state provides an important representative case because Ohio administers the fifth largest public higher education system
in the United States, and is near the national
averages for
enrollment and remediation rates.
In Washington State and New Mexico, districts with student enrollments between 100 and 1,200 spend $ 104 million and $ 69 million more, respectively, in total public funds than if they were spending the statewide average per pupil in these district
In Washington State and New Mexico, districts with student
enrollments between 100 and 1,200 spend $ 104 million and $ 69 million more, respectively,
in total public funds than if they were spending the statewide average per pupil in these district
in total public funds than if they were spending the statewide
average per pupil
in these district
in these districts.
However, they also measured long - term student success
in a nonexperimental analysis of 104 Chicago high schools, including seven Noble network schools, examining
average college
enrollment rates
in the graduating class of 2013.
This rate uses an
average of three years of
enrollment to smooth out the bump
in ninth grade
enrollment that happens because students are retained, but the rate is sensitive to migration trends — for example, if a state or district had more students move out than
in, the rate will be too low.
Among other findings, they concluded that 1) white
enrollment declined much more
in the year of plan implementation than
in subsequent years, and 2) pairing and clustering, the desegregation technique that involved the joining of schools with initially very different black and white
enrollment shares into a single attendance zone, produced the largest
average white -
enrollment losses surrounding plan implementation
in the period of greatest desegregation activity.
The National Center for Education Statistics created the measure, which compares the number of graduates
in a year to an
average of student
enrollment in eighth, ninth, and tenth grades four years earlier.
They increased total school
enrollment and
average class sizes
in order to fit additional instructional resources into the budget.
Research (by Irenee Beattie, Josipa Roksa, and Richard Arum) that examined appellate court cases from 2000 to 2002 found that, on
average, those cases emerged from secondary schools with 29 percent nonwhite students compared to 37 percent nonwhite students
in the national population of secondary schools (the latter weighted for
enrollment size to be comparable to the court case data); appellate cases also emanated from schools with more educational resources per student (student / teacher ratios of 16.3 compared to 17.5 nationally).
These events, as well as our other interventions, result
in Urban Prep's college
enrollment rate of 94 %, exceeding district, state, and national
averages.
But
in 1985, starting
in Minnesota, states began looking at dual
enrollment as a way to prepare even
average students for college and to move nonacademic - minded kids into career and technical education.
• Differences
in average net price between sectors are not a strong predictor of differences
in low - income
enrollment.
A 10 percent increase
in private school
enrollment also reduces the total educational spending per student by over 5 percent of the OECD
average.
[iii]
In addition to enrollment, I also use IPEDS data on net price for low - income students (tuition, fees, room, board, and other expenses less grants and scholarships for dependent students from families making less than $ 30,000 per year), the share of in - state students, and average SAT / ACT score
In addition to
enrollment, I also use IPEDS data on net price for low - income students (tuition, fees, room, board, and other expenses less grants and scholarships for dependent students from families making less than $ 30,000 per year), the share of
in - state students, and average SAT / ACT score
in - state students, and
average SAT / ACT scores.
We do observe some modest differences across groups
in the
average values of the three yes / no variables (open
enrollment or selective admissions, curricular theme or not, and college prep or not).
It pledged the use of other resources
in order to «encourage all schools to achieve an African - American
enrollment equivalent to the
average district - wide African - American
enrollment at the school's respective elementary, middle or high school level.»
If a school district fails to make adjustments
in the face of rising charter school
enrollment, and it keeps the same number of staff and facilities despite having fewer students, it will pay a double penalty: Because charter school tuition payments are pegged to a district's
average spending per student, a school district's charter payments rise when costs per student rise.
Changes
in the Percentage of White Students
in Schools Attended by the
Average Black Student by State, 1970 - 2003 (includes States with 5 % or greater
enrollment of black students
in 1970 and 1980)
As illustrated
in the following figure, adapted from that previous report, the
average white student's public school had a black
enrollment of about 10 percent
in 2010, about the same degree of white exposure to blacks as
in 1980.
According to the NBER study, «LSP schools open
in both 2000 and 2012 experienced an
average enrollment loss of 13 percent over this time period, while other private schools grew 3 percent on
average.»
In fact, in another study of Texas school records, presented at the 2005 meeting of the American Economic Association, Kristin Klopfenstein of Texas Christian University and Kathleen Thomas of Mississippi State University found, as Klopfenstein says, «zero effect for the average kid» of AP enrollment on college performanc
In fact,
in another study of Texas school records, presented at the 2005 meeting of the American Economic Association, Kristin Klopfenstein of Texas Christian University and Kathleen Thomas of Mississippi State University found, as Klopfenstein says, «zero effect for the average kid» of AP enrollment on college performanc
in another study of Texas school records, presented at the 2005 meeting of the American Economic Association, Kristin Klopfenstein of Texas Christian University and Kathleen Thomas of Mississippi State University found, as Klopfenstein says, «zero effect for the
average kid» of AP
enrollment on college performance.
Among district schools within a half - mile and one - mile radius, charter school entry leads to significant decreases
in general education
enrollment of approximately 16 students per school, on
average.
•
In Newark and Cincinnati, «beat the odds»
enrollments are many times the 50 - city
average.
The study noted that urban areas like Boston, Detroit, Indianapolis, Memphis, and Nashville «appear to provide their students with strong enough annual growth
in both math and reading that continuous
enrollment in an
average charter school can erase the typical deficit seen among students
in their region.»
According to O'Neill, states like Massachusetts and Connecticut, which are considered leaders
in public education, have special education
enrollment rates above the national
average.
But we see similar patterns
in charter schools too: a number of studies have shown that charter school students have a higher chance of high school graduation or college
enrollment even when their test scores do not differ on
average from their traditional public school counterparts.
There was greater variation
in the sizes of schools with a high proportion of teachers with low ratings of instruction (LSS)(210 to 2,788 students), with an
average enrollment of 1,081.
By contrast, about a quarter of all district
enrollments were
in «beat the odds» schools, suggesting that, on
average, the charter sector is more likely to provide
enrollment in a «beat the odds» school than the district sector
in the city.
While they are considered «high - performing» charters, close inspection of Plato Academy student populations
in Pinellas County reveal that their
enrollment of African American, disabled and low socio - economic students is far below the Pinellas district
average (According to the DOE School Public Accountability Reports, 2015 - 16.)
The 20 CA districts closest
in enrollment to OUSD operate an
average of 47 schools, representing a wide range: from 20 to 76 schools.
Researchers looked at the performance of students
in the dual
enrollment courses as well as the program's influence on the students» grade point
average, graduation rates, college choices and college performance.
The authors multiplied estimated or actual
enrollment, as applicable, by the
average course cost for each institution type found
in the 2014 IPEDS data, «
average net price — students receiving grant or scholarship aid.»
Native American students» outcomes can be challenging to study
in the context of national datasets, because Native American
enrollment in schools tends to be low on
average.
«On
average in states with charter laws, students who qualify for services under IDEA made up 10.62 % of total
enrollment in charter schools and 12.46 % of total
enrollment in traditional public schools (i.e., non-charter public schools).
Both states have participation rates well above the 47 % national preschool
average, and Oklahoma's 75 %
enrollment rate is the highest
in the country.
The
average ACT score for charter schools
in the top 10 was 20.6, with Noble Network's UIC College Prep campus scoring 21.9 — the highest - ever
average at an open -
enrollment, non-selective CPS high school.