Their special education population is also less
than district averages.
A typical Partnership school is 88 percent Latino, 10 percent African - American, 30 percent English learners, 15 percent students with special needs, and 95 percent eligible for free or reduced - price lunch — all higher
than district averages.
Emerson's graduation rate is also higher
than the district average.
Attendance for students in that program was 87.5 percent, almost 10 percent higher
than the district average, and only 3.4 percent of students in academies there dropped out of school — less than one - third the figure for students districtwide.
In other words, these schools typically received 1 to 4 percent more
than the district average, or $ 15,000 to $ 60,000 per school of 500 students in a district where the average school expenditure is $ 3,000 per pupil.
In terms of academic performance, KIPP students» achievement in grade 4 (before entering KIPP) is lower
than the district average by 0.09 standard deviations in reading and by 0.08 standard deviations in math, or roughly one - quarter of a grade level in each subject.
The school's English and math test scores were higher
than the district average.
Students who have been continuously enrolled in NPS schools have made even greater growth
than the district average
Black HISD students today are 34 percent more likely to be in special education
than the district average, which is not much different than a decade ago, when they were 36 percent more likely to be in special education.
We welcome scholars with IEPs and have a 22 % SPED population which is higher
than our district average.
That's slightly higher
than the district average of 62 percent.
The Vancouver school serves 32 percent less
than its district average.
97 % of Paterson charter high school students graduated within 4 years — higher
than the district average of 88 % and the state average of 91 %.
charter high school students graduated within 4 years — higher
than the district average of 88 % and the state average of 91 %.
93 % of Jersey City charter high school students graduated within 4 years — higher
than the district average of 78 % and on par with the state average of 91 %.
In Denver, 20 % of students are enrolled in orange and red schools: schools where, on average, nearly 90 % of the students are low - income and students of color, and where proficiency levels are, on average, 16 percentage points lower
than the district average.
Although it allows the LAUSD discretion in protecting the schools most vulnerable to high turnover rates and classroom instability, this agreement protects schools throughout the LAUSD by ensuring that no school is impacted by layoffs at a rate greater
than the District average.
All four schools were chosen for the grant because they have much higher percentages of students receiving subsidized lunches
than the district average, and their test scores are also below Wake's average.
This settlement also protects schools throughout the LAUSD by ensuring that no school is impacted by layoffs at a rate greater
than the District average.
WISH so far has a high concentration of students with special needs and ethnic diversity and shows test scores higher
than the district average.
Also, 91 % of Camden charter high school students in the class of 2016 graduated within 4 years — higher
than the district average of 69 % and on par with the state average of 91 %.
Leading Educators Fellows stay in high - poverty schools at rates between 10 and 29 percent higher
than the district average.
At this school, 96 percent of high school students graduate in four years, higher
than the district average of 84 percent and the state average of 91 percent.
Meanwhile, some schools have similar or much higher suspension rates
than the district average (2.85 %).
In three of the charters, the Aspire school's rate of suspension is about three times higher
than the district average.
Not exact matches
But for Jamie Oliver to never once mention to the Food Revolution audience that Carpinteria is operating with outside assistance and, presumably, a significantly larger budget
than the
average school
district is, to my mind, an omission that borders on the unethical.
These school
districts, which serve more
than 10 percent of the nation's school children, charge an
average of $ 1.80 for an elementary school meal and $ 2.14 for a high school meal.
[21] Similarly, the School Nutrition Association estimated that the cost of providing a school lunch was $ 2.92 for the 2008 - 2009 school year, which is considerably higher
than the
average per - meal revenue for paid meals the following year in the 20 largest
districts ($ 2.07 in elementary schools and $ 2.41 in high schools).
According to Hanetho, a recent survey by the park
district showed that 86 percent of residents visited a Northbrook park in the last year, 14 percent higher
than the national
average.
Teachers in the
district's three schools are paid about $ 12,000 more
than the state
average, and the schools offer an array of top - notch educational opportunities, including low class size, foreign language instruction, fine arts and orchestra programs, low - cost preschool and a full - day kindergarten, before - and after - school care, and several extracurricular sports teams.
But park
district officials have said before that they hope to increase taxes by no more
than $ 10 per month for an
average Northbrook resident.
School board officials said The Healthy, Hunger - Free Kids Act of 2010 requires them to change pricing because the law states that schools must charge on
average no less for paid student meals
than the
district receives in federal free meal reimbursement.
I don't profess to understand the intricacies of how my
district figures out the calories (I do know it's
averaged over a week) but it seemed to me that a kid ought to come out at less
than 664 caloires if they're not taking all the food, rather
than over that figure.
School spending on Long Island is projected to rise an
average 2.35 percent for the 2017 - 18 school year, with school taxes to increase an
average 1.73 percent — more
than this year's hikes, but within state tax - cap restrictions for the great majority of
districts.
Cuomo's office has said that residents of the 24th
District who do itemize their federal taxes, more
than 81,000 taxpayers, would see their tax liability increase by an
average of $ 2,434 under the GOP plan.
Sen. Charles Fuschillo branded them «unacceptable» because, he said, schools in his
district would take a bigger hit
than the
average.
(King's
district, which covers the southern part of Nassau County, is the only one in the state where the
average property tax deduction is higher
than the
average income tax deduction.)
In a press release, Cuomo said nearly 60,000 taxpayers in Reed's
district would be affected by the reform plan, seeing an
average increase of more
than $ 2,500.
The new
district will have 128,929, 160 less
than the
average.
Three North Fork
Districts — Greenport, New Suffolk and Southold — have proposed tax levy increases greater
than the Suffolk County
average of 3.5 percent.
The raises, which
averaged more
than $ 8,000 or 11 percent, went to employees including 18 law assistants who each received salary hikes of $ 7,000 after passing the bar exam and being promoted to assistant
district attorney.
Among the more striking examples: Life expectancy in Brownsville is 11 years shorter, on
average,
than for residents of the financial
district.
This
district is much older
than the national
average and is bleeding population at a good pace.
According to All About Redistricting, «Any
district with more or fewer people
than the
average (also known as the «ideal» population), must be specifically justified by a consistent state policy.
The state Education Department's tax report card released this week found
districts on
average are increasing their levies by 3.4 percent, higher
than the 2 percent property tax cap proposed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
But while tax revenues have been successfully limited under the cap, Michael Borges with the New York State Association of School Business Officials said
districts» costs, including health care and transportation, have continued to rise much faster
than the
average rate of inflation.
Nearly 200,000 households in Maloney's
district claim the SALT deduction at an
average rate of more
than $ 21,000.
New Jersey schools were also less restrained
than New York's this year: Last month, Jersey
districts were seeking
average tax levy increases of of 4.8 per - cent — half again as high as the
average in New York this week.
Elsewhere, primary returns ranged from awful to almost
average, showing 14 percent in the incredibly gerrymandered finger - shaped 101st Assembly
District, where incumbent Claudia Tenney of Utica trounced Walden Mayor Brian Maher, to 9.8 percent in the new 51st Senate
District race, in which veteran Jim Seward blasted challenger Jim Blake by a more
than five - to - one margin.
Last year,
District 30's tax levy was down 15.17 percent to return the more
than $ 1.8 million to taxpayers; the
average decrease was $ 382 and the levy was $ 19,556,827.