- Lancaster County, Pennsylvania schools
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania schools include 18 school districts and 1 charter school.
The public school districts include Cocalico, Columbia Borough, Conestoga Valley, Donegal, Eastern Lancaster County, Elizabethtown Area, Ephrata Area, Hempfield, Lampeter-Strasburg, Lancaster, Manheim Central, Manheim Township, Penn Manor, Pequea Valley, Solanco, and Warwick.
There is also one charter school, the
La Academia Charter School .SAT scores
The
Scholastic Aptitude Test is a college admissions test administered by theCollege Board . Taking the test requires both planning (registration weeks or months before the test is administered) and payment of a fee.High scores do not necessarily mean better schools. In blue-collar communities, fewer students will plan for and pay to take the SAT, but those students will tend to be the best students in the school, while in white-collar communities, more average students will take the SAT. In 2003,
North Dakota , tied for last place in participation (4%), yet had the highest SAT scores in the nation (602 verbal, 613 math). That same year, 73% of all Pennsylvania students took the SAT, scoring 500 verbal and 502 math. [ [http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/about/news_info/cbsenior/yr2003/pdf/table3.pdf#search=%22sat%20scores%20by%20state%22 Mean SAT scores by state] ]The SAT has recently been changed to have three sections - reading, math, and writing - instead of two sections - verbal and math. A perfect score on a section is 800. Students accepted for admission to the
Ivy League University of Pennsylvania in 2000 averaged over 700 points on each of the sections (verbal and math) used then. [ [http://www.upenn.edu/almanac/v47/n08/StateOfUniv2K.html The State of the University, 2000-2001] ] On the other hand,Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania offers an honors program to 25-30 incoming freshmen each year, who average 600 on each section of the SAT. [ [http://www2.etown.edu/strategicplan/objectives-honors.html Major Implementing Objectives] ]PSSA scores
The
Pennsylvania System of School Assessment refers to standardized tests that grade the school, rather than individual students. Every Pennsylvania student is tested annually in grades 3 through 8, and in grade 11 for both math and reading proficiency; those in grades 5, 8 and 11 are tested for writing proficiency as well.Target goals are for 80% graduation rate (for high schools) and 90% attendance, 45% mathematics proficiency and 54% reading proficiency, and 95% participation in taking the PSSA tests. Schools are considered to meet the goal with substandard scores if they show improvement over the prior year.
These goals exist for not only the entire school, but for certain subgroups. In theory, a school could have as many as 41 goals to meet, but since schools are exempt from a subgroup goal if the subgroup has fewer than 40 students in that subgroup, no Lancaster County school has anywhere near 41 goals to meet.
Explaining the scores and levels
Scores show (passing/all) AYP goals.
Schools progress from Warning to School Improvement I, School Improvement II, School Corrective Action I, and to School Corrective Action II for missing the "same" AYP goal in repeated years. If different AYP targets are missed each year, a school can fail to meet AYP goals forever, yet remain in the “Warning” category.
AYP (adequate yearly progress) status)
Scores show (Satisfactory goals/Total Goals)
Met AYP goals
Satisfactory results in meeting all goals
* 104 of the county's 117 schools fit in this category.Making Progress
Substandard performances, but showing improvement
* Columbia Junior/Senior High School (17/17)
* Fulton Elementary School (13/13)
* George Washington Elementary (21/21)
* Hand Middle School (22/22)
* Reynolds Middle School (16/16)
* Ross Elementary School (11/11)Warning
Missed AYP goals, but not same goal in consecutive years
* Burrowes School (10/13)
* Ephrata Senior High School (12/13)
* Hempfield Senior High School (16/17)
* Warwick Middle School (11/13)School Improvement I
Missed "same" AYP goal two consecutive years
* (no schools in this category)School Improvement II
Missed "same" AYP goal three consecutive years
* (no schools in this category)Corrective Action I
Missed "same" AYP goal four consecutive years
* Buehrle Alternative School (3/9)
* Elizabethtown Area Middle School (11/13)
* King Elementary School (12/17)
* McCaskey Campuses (26/29)
* Price Elementary School (12/13)
* Warwick Senior High School (11/13)Corrective Action II
Missed "same" AYP goal five consecutive years
* Wheatland Middle School (21/23)Corrective Action III
Missed "same" AYP goal six or more consecutive years
* (no schools in this category)See also
References
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