Published April 11, 2008 09:20 pm - State school rankings for area schools were a mixed bag of higher and lower rankings for 2007.
Area school rankings mixed
By Nate Smith, Staff Writer
State school rankings for area schools were a mixed bag of higher and lower rankings for 2007.
According to results published last week by the state Department of Education, four schools were upgraded from 2006 rankings while seven schools were ranked lower. Twelve local schools remained the same.
Using statistics from the ISTEP+ test and using improvement over three years as the standard, the state ranks schools into one of five categories: exemplary, commendable, academic progress, academic watch and academic probation.
Nine schools made the exemplary rank this year, with five schools at commendable status. One school, Loogootee Jr.-Sr. High School, had academic progress and nine schools were placed on academic watch.
The state-rated exemplary schools in the area were: Barr-Reeve Primary, Barr-Reeve Intermediate, North Daviess Elementary, Shoals Elementary, Loogootee East Elementary, Otwell Elementary, Pike Central High School and Washington Catholic Middle and High School.
In 2007, North Elementary, Loogootee West Elementary and Shoals Jr.-Sr. High join North Daviess Jr.-Sr. High, Lena Dunn Elementary, Washington Junior High and Washington High School on the academic watch list. Two Pike County schools, Pike Central Middle and Winslow Elementary, are also on academic watch.
Just because a school is placed on academic watch does not mean it is falling behind other schools. At North Daviess, 75 percent of its students passed both the English and math portions of the ISTEP+ test, but it is rated on academic watch because it did not improve enough.
Conversely, Pike Central High School was rated an exemplary school because its passing rates improved by 5.9 percent — the highest improvement score in the area. But its passing rate — at 70.2 percent — is still lower than North Daviess’.
The improvement factor also hurt ratings at traditionally strong schools. At Veale Elementary, where in 2006 they were rated exemplary. But because the school did not improve enough from 2006, its status was downgraded to commendable.
Veale Principal Rob McCormick said although the initial ranking is lower, his educators love accountability and will continue to work for the best for their students.
“The whole thought was a good idea but when it comes to practical application, then you see these little glitches,” McCormick said. “We’re working hard and doing our best and doing as well as we have ever done and yet because of the way it is applied, you actually go down.”
McCormick also said if a parent would look in depth, he or she will see Veale has one of the highest passing rates in the area.
Also, with continued quarterly testing, each student will get more help with weaker subjects.
The same goes for Barr-Reeve Jr.-Sr. High, which had the highest percentage in passing rate with 89.7 percent.
But since they did not improve but went down by .3 percent, its stayed at commendable status. Earlier this year, the school was named a Four-Star school for its 2006-07 performance, as was B-R Intermediate.