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Accountability Rating: This refers to the district and campus ratings assigned
by the 2007 state accountability system. Districts and campuses are evaluated
on performance on the TAKS, SDAA II, completion rate and annual dropout rate.
Possible ratings are:
- Exemplary;
- Recognized;
- Academically Acceptable;
- Academically Unacceptable;
- Not Rated: Other; and
- Not Rated: Data Integrity Issues.
The above ratings apply to districts (including charter operators) and schools
rated under the standard accountability procedures.
Additionally, alternative education accountability (AEA) ratings are issued
to campuses and charters registered to be evaluated under AEA procedures. Possible
AEA ratings are:
- AEA: Academically Acceptable;
- AEA: Academically Unacceptable; and
- AEA: Not Rated - Other.
For a more detailed explanation of the accountability system, see the 2007
Accountability Manual available at www.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/account/2007/manual/.
Accountability Subset: This refers to the group of non-mobile students whose
performance on the TAKS and SDAA II is used in determining a school's and district's
accountability rating. Specifically, the subsets have been calculated as follows:
Campus-level accountability subset: If a student was reported in membership
at one campus on October 27, 2006, but moves to another campus before the TAKS
or SDAA II test, that student's performance was removed from the accountability
results for both campuses, whether the campuses were in the same district or
different districts. Campuses were held accountable only for those students
reported to be enrolled in the campus in the fall and tested in the same campus
in the second semester.
District-level accountability subset: If a student was in one district on October
27, 2006, but then moved to another district before the TAKS or SDAA II test,
that student's performance was taken out of the accountability subset for both
districts. However, if the student moved from campus to campus within the district,
his or her performance was included in that district's results, even though
it did not count for either campus. This means that district performance results
do not match the sum of the campus performance results.
TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation, included in the AEIS report, shows
what percent of a district's or school's test takers are mobile and are not
included in the Accountability Subset. For additional information
and examples of how the accountability subset is determined, see chapter 2
of the 2007
Accountability Manual. Also see Mobile, TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt
Participation, and Appendix
E.
Adopted Tax Rate (calendar year 2006) (District Profile
only): This is the
locally adopted tax rate set for the 2006 calendar year. The total adopted
rate is composed of a maintenance and operation rate (M&O) and a debt service
rate (sometimes referred to as the Interest and Sinking fund rate). Rates are
expressed per $100 of taxable value. Taxes based on this rate were to be paid
by taxpayers in early 2007. The state value shown for the adopted tax rates
is the simple average of all the district rates. (Source: Texas Comptroller
of Public Accounts, July 2007)
Advanced Course/Dual Enrollment Completion: This indicator is based on a count
of students who complete and receive credit for at least one advanced course
in grades 9-12. Advanced courses include dual enrollment courses. Dual enrollment
courses are those for which a student gets both high school and college credit.
Deciding who gets credit for which college course is described in Texas Administrative
Code §74.25:
To be eligible to enroll and be awarded credit toward state graduation requirements,
a student must have the approval of the high school principal or other school
official designated by the school district. The course for which credit is
awarded must provide advanced academic instruction beyond, or in greater depth
than, the essential knowledge and skills for the equivalent high school course.
Appendix C lists all courses identified as advanced, with the exception of
courses designated only as dual enrollment. Dual enrollment courses are not
shown, as the courses vary from campus to campus and could potentially include
a large proportion of all high school courses.
Course completion information is reported by districts through the Public Education
Information Management System (PEIMS) after the close of the school year. The
values, expressed as a percent, are calculated as follows:
number of students in grades 9-12 who received credit for at least
one advanced
or dual enrollment course in 2005-06
divided by
number of students in grades 9-12 who completed at least one course in 2005-06
Schools and districts may qualify for Gold Performance Acknowledgment for advanced
course/dual enrollment completion. For a more detailed explanation of Gold
Performance Acknowledgment, see chapter 5 of the 2007 Accountability Manual.
Special education students are included in the results shown for the campus
or district and the individual student groups. For purposes of comparison,
course completion rates are also shown for the prior year (2004-05). See also
Appendix C. (Source: PEIMS, June 2006, June 2005)
Advanced Placement Examinations: See AP/IB Results.
All Funds: Financial information is broken down by fund type
(general fund only and all funds). All Funds consists of four fundamental
fund groups: General Fund (fund codes 101-199 and 420), Special Revenue Funds
(fund codes 200/300/400), Debt Service Funds (fund code 599), and Capital Projects
Funds (fund codes 601 and 699). It also includes the Enterprise Fund, and the
National School Breakfast and Lunch Program (fund code 701). Within the general
fund, fund code 420—Foundation School Program and Other State Aid—is used by
charter operators only.
Note that all financial data shown by fund is actual data, not budgeted. Accordingly,
the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Annual Dropout Rate: Three annual dropout rate indicators are shown:
(1) Annual Dropout Rate (Gr 7-8). This includes only grades 7 and 8. This is
the rate used in determining a campus accountability rating under standard
procedures (for campuses that have one or both of those grades) or the district's
rating. It is calculated as follows:
number of dropouts in grades 7 and 8
divided by
number of grade 7 and 8 students who were in attendance at any time during
the 2005-06 school year
(2) Annual Dropout Rate (Gr 7-12). This includes grades 7 through 12. This
is the rate used in determining a campus or charter operator accountability
rating under AEA procedures (for campuses or charters that have one or more
of those grades). It is calculated as follows:
number of dropouts in grades 7 through 12
divided by number of grade 7-12 students who were in attendance
at any time during the 2005-06 school year
(3) Annual Dropout Rate (Gr 9-12). This includes grades 9 through
12. This new measure shows the dropout rates for the high school grades. It
is a report-only measure and is not used in determining accountability ratings.
It is calculated as follows:
number of dropouts in grades 9 through 12
divided by
number of grade 9-12 students who were in attendance at any time during the
2005-06 school year
Beginning with dropouts reported for the 2005-06 school year, TEA used a more
rigorous dropout definition, based on the federal definition. For this reason,
in 2007 a school leaver provision was in place, stating that a campus or district
rating cannot be lowered because of performance on annual dropout rate. Further,
because dropout rates for 2005-06 are not comparable to those reported for
2004-05, they are shown for 2005-06 only. See Appendix I of the 2007
Accountability Manual for more information on the new dropout definition.
All three annual rates appear on district, region, and state-level AEIS reports.
Reports for secondary campuses evaluated under standard procedures show the
grade 7-8 and grade 9-12 rates. Reports for secondary campuses evaluated under
AEA procedures show the grade 7-8 and grade 7-12 rates.
Note that with all annual dropout rate calculations, a cumulative count of
students is used in the denominator. This method for calculating the dropout
rate neutralizes the effects of mobility by including in the denominator every
student ever reported in attendance at the campus or district throughout the
school year, regardless of length of stay. For a more complete description
of dropout rates, see the Secondary School Completion and Dropouts in Texas
Public Schools, 2005-06 reports, available at www.tea.state.tx.us/research/.
See also Dropout and Leaver Record. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2005, Oct. 2006 and
June 2006)
AP/IB Results: These refer to the results of the College Board's Advanced Placement
(AP) examinations and the International Baccalaureate Organization's International
Baccalaureate (IB) examinations taken by Texas public school students. High
school students may take these examinations, ideally upon completion of AP
or IB courses, and may receive advanced placement or credit, or both, upon
entering college. Generally, colleges will award credit or advanced placement
for scores of 3, 4, or 5 on AP examinations and scores of 4, 5, 6, or 7 on
IB examinations. Requirements vary by college and by subject tested.
Three values are calculated for this indicator:
(1) Tested. This shows the percent of students in grades 11 and 12 taking at
least one AP or IB examination:
number of 11th and 12th grade students taking at least one AP or IB examination
divided by
number of non-special education 11th and 12th grade students
(2) Examinees >= Criterion. The percent of examinees with at least one AP
or IB score at or above the criterion score (3 on AP or 4 on IB):
number of 11th and 12th grade AP or IB examinees who scored at or above criterion
divided by
number of 11th and 12th grade AP or IB examinees
(3) Scores >= Criterion. This shows the percent of scores at or above the
criterion score (3 on AP or 4 on IB):
number of 11th and 12th grade AP & IB examination scores at or above
criterion
divided by
number of 11th and 12th grade AP & IB examination scores
The denominator of equation (1) does not include 11th and 12th grade students
served in special education; however, all students who took at least one AP
or IB examination are included in the numerator. The performance of special
education students is included in both the numerator and denominator of the
other equations.
Schools and districts may qualify for Gold Performance Acknowledgment for participation
and performance on AP/IB results (measures (1) and (2) above). For a more detailed
explanation of Gold Performance Acknowledgment, see the 2007 Accountability
Manual. See also Criterion Score. (Sources: The College Board, Aug. 2006, Jan.
2006; The International Baccalaureate Organization, Aug. 2006, Aug. 2005; and
PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005)
ARD: This refers to the Admission, Review, and Dismissal committee that determines
the individual education plan for every student in special education. See also
Special Education and TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation.
At-Risk: A student is identified as at risk of dropping out of school based
on state-defined criteria (§TEC 29.081.) At-risk status is obtained from
PEIMS 110 records. The percent of at-risk students is calculated as the sum
of the students coded as at risk, divided by the total number of students in
membership:
number of students coded as at-risk divided by
total number of students
A column showing at-risk student performance is shown on the district, region,
and state reports. While this column is not available on the campus-level reports,
counts of at-risk students are shown in the Profile section of the campus reports
(as well as the district, region, and state reports).
The statutory criteria for at-risk status include each student who is under
21 years of age and who:
- was not advanced from one grade level to the next for one or more
school years;
- is in grades 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, or 12 and did not maintain an average
equivalent to 70 on a scale of 100 in two or more subjects in the foundation
curriculum during a semester in the preceding or current school year or
is not maintaining such an average in two or more subjects in the foundation
curriculum in the current semester;
- did not perform satisfactorily on an assessment instrument administered
to the student under TEC Subchapter B, Chapter 39, and who has not in the
previous or current school year subsequently performed on that instrument
or another appropriate instrument at a level equal to at least 110 percent
of the level of satisfactory performance on that instrument;
- is in prekindergarten, kindergarten or grades 1, 2, or 3 and did not
perform satisfactorily on a readiness test or assessment instrument administered
during the current school year;
- is pregnant or is a parent;
- has been placed in an alternative education program in accordance
with §TEC
37.006 during the preceding or current school year;
- has been expelled in accordance with §TEC 37.007 during the preceding
or current school year;
- is currently on parole, probation, deferred prosecution, or other
conditional release;
- was previously reported through the PEIMS to have dropped out of school;
- is a student of limited English proficiency, as defined by §TEC
29.052;
- is in the custody or care of the Department of Protective and Regulatory
Services or has, during the current school year, been referred to the department
by a school official, officer of the juvenile court, or law enforcement
official;
- is homeless, as defined by 42 U.S.C. Section 11302 and its subsequent
amendments; or
- resided in the preceding school year or resides in the current school
year in a residential placement facility in the district, including a detention
facility, substance abuse treatment facility, emergency shelter, psychiatric
hospital, halfway house, or foster group home.
(Sources: PEIMS, Oct. 2006; Texas Education Code, 79th Texas Legislature)
Attendance Rate: Attendance rates reported in AEIS are based on student attendance
for the entire school year. Only students in grades 1-12 are included in the
calculations. Attendance is calculated as follows:
total number of days students were present in 2005-06
divided by
total number of days students were in membership in 2005-06
Schools and
districts may qualify for Gold Performance Acknowledgment based on their
attendance rate. For a more detailed explanation of Gold Performance
Acknowledgment, see the 2007 Accountability Manual.
Attendance rates are shown for 2005-06 and 2004-05. (Source: PEIMS, June 2006,
June 2005)
Auxiliary Staff (District Profile only): This shows the Full-Time Equivalent
(FTE) count of staff reported without a role but with a PEIMS employment and
payroll record. Counts of auxiliary staff are expressed as a percent of total
staff. For auxiliary staff, the FTE is simply the value of the percent of day
worked. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Average Actual Salaries (regular duties only): For each professional staff
type, the total salary is divided by the total FTE count of staff who receive
that salary. The total actual salary amount is pay for regular duties only
and does not include supplemental payments for coaching, band and orchestra
assignments, and club sponsorships. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Average Teacher Salary by Years of Experience (regular
duties only): Total
pay for teachers within each experience group is divided by the total teacher
FTE for the group. The total actual salary amount is pay for regular duties
only and does not include supplements. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Average Years Experience of Teachers: Weighted averages are
obtained by multiplying each teacher's FTE count by years of experience. These
amounts are summed for all teachers and divided by the total teacher FTE count, resulting in the averages
shown. This measure refers to the total number of (completed) years of professional
experience for the individual in any district. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Average Years Experience of Teachers with District: Weighted averages are obtained
by multiplying each teacher's FTE count by years of experience. These amounts
are summed for all teachers and divided by the total teacher FTE count, resulting
in the averages shown. This measure refers to tenure, i.e., the number of years
employed in the reporting district, whether or not there has been any interruption
in service.
Campus Group: Each campus is assigned to a unique comparison group of 40 other
public schools (from anywhere in the state), that closely matches that campus
on six characteristics. Comparison groups are provided so that schools can
compare their performance to that of other schools with whom they are demographically
similar. Comparison groups are also used for determining the Comparable Improvement
Gold Performance Acknowledgments.
The demographic characteristics used to construct the campus comparison groups
include those defined in statute as well as others found to be statistically
related to performance. They are:
- the percent of African American students enrolled for 2006-07;
- the percent of Hispanic students enrolled for 2006-07;
- the percent of White students enrolled for 2006-07;
- the percent of economically disadvantaged students enrolled for 2006-07;
- the percent of limited English proficient (LEP) students enrolled for
2006-07; and
- the percent of mobile students as determined from 2005-06 cumulative
attendance.
All schools are first grouped by type (elementary, middle, secondary, or multi-level).
Then the group is determined on the basis of the most predominant features
at the target school. For example, assume a high school has 40.5% African American,
20.9% Hispanic, 32.5% White, 35.6% economically disadvantaged, 11.2% limited
English proficient, and 21.7% mobile students. Of these features, the most
predominant (i.e., the largest) is the percent of African American students,
followed by the percent of economically disadvantaged students, the percent
of White students, the percent of mobile students, the percent of Hispanic
students, and finally, the percent of limited English proficient students.
The following steps illustrate the group identification process:
Step 1: 100 secondary campuses having percentages closest to 40.5% African
American are identified;
Step 2: 10 schools from the initial group of 100 are eliminated on the basis
of being most distant from the value of 35.6% economically disadvantaged;
Step 3: 10 of the remaining 90 schools that are most distant from 32.5% White
students are eliminated;
Step 4: 10 of the remaining 80 schools that are most distant from 21.7% mobile
students are eliminated;
Step 5: 10 of the remaining 70 schools that are most distant from 20.9% Hispanic
students are eliminated;
Step 6: 10 of the remaining 60 schools that are most distant from 11.2% limited
English proficient students are eliminated; and
Step 7: 10 of the remaining 50 schools that are most distant from 20.9% Hispanic
students and/or 32.5% White students are eliminated. (This last reduction step
is based on the least predominant characteristics among the four student groups
evaluated in the accountability system: African American, Hispanic, White,
and economically disadvantaged.)
The final group size is 40 schools. This methodology creates a unique comparison
group for every campus. Please note the following:
- With this methodology, the number of times a school appears as a member
of other groups will vary.
- In cases where the campus has a missing mobility value, the district's
average mobility is used as a proxy. This will happen for schools in their
first year of operation.
- Districts are not grouped.
In the Performance section of a campus AEIS report, the value given in the
Campus Group column is the median of the values from the 40-school group for
that campus. (The median is defined as that point in the distribution of values,
above and below which one-half of the values fall.) In the Profile section
of the report, the value given in the Campus Group column is the mean, or average
value. If a report contains question marks (?) in the Campus Group column,
this means there were too few schools in the comparison group (specifically,
fewer than 25 schools) to have confidence in the median values. Such small
numbers are considered too unstable to provide an adequate comparison group
value.
See Comparable Improvement and Texas Growth Index.
Campus #: The campus number is the unique 9-digit identifying number assigned
to every Texas public school. It consists of the county number (assigned alphabetically
from 001 to 254), followed by the district number (9-- is used primarily for
regular districts, 8-- for charter operators), and ending with the campus number
(generally 00- for high schools, 04- for middle schools, and 1-- for elementary
schools).
Class Size Averages by Grade and Subject: These values show the average class
size for elementary classes (by grade) and for secondary classes (by subject)
for selected subjects. Districts do not report actual class size averages.
The class size averages are computed by the TEA based on the teacher role and
class schedule information reported in the PEIMS 090 record by the district
each fall. The following principles are used in deriving the average class
sizes:
- classes identified as serving regular, compensatory/remedial, gifted
and talented, career and technology, and honors students are included in
calculation;
- subjects in the areas of English language arts, mathematics, science,
social studies, foreign language, computer science, business education,
vocational, and self-contained are included in the calculation;
- classes where the number of students served is reported to be zero
are not included in the calculation;
- service codes with the "SR" prefix are not included in the
calculation;
- only teacher roles coded as "special duty teacher," "teacher, " and "substitute
teacher" are included in the calculation;
- only class settings coded as "regular class" are included
in the calculation;
- missing partial FTE counts are not included in the calculation;
- if a teacher teaches more than one class at the same time, the records
are combined into a single class; and
- elementary classes where the number of students exceeds 100 are excluded
from the calculation.
The methodology differs depending on whether the class is elementary or secondary
due to differences in reporting practices for these two types of teacher schedules.
For secondary classes, each unique combination of teacher and class time is
counted as a class. Averages are determined by summing the number of students
served (in a given subject at the campus) and dividing by the calculated count
of classes.
For elementary classes, the number of records reported for each grade is considered.
For example, a teacher teaching a variety of subjects to the same group of
fourth graders all day should have only one record indicating the total number
of fourth grade students served. However, an elementary teacher who teaches
a single subject to five different sections of fourth graders each day will
have five separate records reported, each with a unique count of students served.
Average class sizes are calculated by summing all the students served (in a
given grade at the campus) and dividing by the sum of the teacher FTE counts
for those records. So, for example, a full-time mathematics teacher with five
sections of fourth graders, with 20 different students in each, would have
an average of 100/5 or 20 students.
College Admissions Tests: See SAT/ACT Results.
College Readiness Indicators: In response to legislative action and an executive
order from the Governor, the Performance section of the AEIS report has been
restructured to group certain indicators under this heading. These indicators
help provide a picture of college preparedness at a given high school, and
can be used by educators as they work to ensure that students are able to perform
college-level course work at institutions of higher education.
The indicators include:
- Advanced Course/Dual Enrollment Completion;
- Recommended High School Program/Distinguished Achievement Program Graduates;
- AP/IB Results;
- Texas Success Initiative (TSI) Higher Education Readiness Component;
- SAT/ACT Results; and
- College-Ready Graduates
College-Ready Graduates: This new indicator of college readiness is shown in
the AEIS reports for the first time this year. It was created in response to
a new statute (TEC §39.051(b)(13)) that requires establishing an indicator
of "... the measure of progress toward preparation for postsecondary success."
To be considered college-ready as defined by this indicator, a graduate must
have met or exceeded the college-ready criteria on the TAKS exit-level test,
or the SAT test, or the ACT test. The criteria for each is:
Subject |
Exit-level TAKS |
|
SAT |
|
ACT |
ELA |
>= 2200 scale score on ELA test
AND
a “3” or higher on essay |
OR |
>=500 on Critical Reading
AND
>=1070 Total |
OR |
>= 19 on English
AND
>= 23 Composite |
Math |
>= 2200 scale score on mathematics test |
OR |
>=500 on Math
AND
>=1070 Total |
OR |
>= 19 on Math AND
>= 23 Composite |
Three values are calculated for this indicator:
(1) Eng Lang Arts. This shows the percent of graduates who scored
at or above the criterion score on the TAKS, SAT, or ACT English language arts
tests.
number of graduates who scored at or above the College-Ready criterion
for ELA
divided by
number of graduates (class of 2006) with ELA results to evaluate
(2) Mathematics. This shows the percent of graduates who scored at
or above the criterion score on the TAKS, SAT, or ACT mathematics tests.
number of graduates who scored at or above the College-Ready criterion
for mathematics
divided by
number of graduates (class of 2006) with mathematics results to evaluate
(3) Both Subjects. This shows the percent of graduates who scored
at or above the criterion score on both the TAKS, SAT, or ACT ELA and mathematics
tests.
number of graduates who scored at or above the College-Ready criteria
on
both ELA & mathematics
divided by
number of graduates (class of 2006) with results in both subjects to evaluate
This indicator differs from the TSI - Higher Education Readiness Component,
in several ways:
- it includes performance on the SAT and ACT;
- it is based on prior year graduates rather than current year 11th graders;
- it provides an overall measure of both subjects combined; and
- performance is tied to the campus and district where the student graduated,
while the TSI indicator uses the campus and district where the TAKS tests
were administered.
(Sources: TEA Student Assessment Division, The College Board, Aug. 2006, ACT,
Inc. Oct. 2006; and PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Commended Performance: See TAKS.
Community Services (2005-06) (District Profile only): Expenditures for activities
or purposes other than regular public education. These are activities relating
to the whole community, such as the operation of a school library, swimming
pool, and playgrounds for the public (objects 6100-6400, function 61). Community
Services expenditures are shown as a stand-alone amount and are not included
in total operating expenditures.
Note this item is reported as actual expenditures, not budgeted. Accordingly,
the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See also Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Comparable Improvement: Comparable Improvement (CI) is a measure that calculates
how student performance on the TAKS mathematics and reading/English language
arts tests has changed (or grown) from one year to the next, and compares the
change to that of the 40 schools that are demographically most similar to the
target school.
CI is calculated separately for reading/ELA and mathematics, based on individual
student Texas Growth Index (TGI) values. The student-level TGI values are aggregated
to the campus level to create an average TGI for each campus. The average TGI
values for the 40 member group are rank ordered. Schools that fall into the
first quartile (i.e. top 10 schools of the 40 in their campus group), receive
Gold Performance Acknowledgment for CI.
For a complete explanation of Gold Performance Acknowledgments, refer
to chapter 5 of the 2007
Accountability Manual for
a detailed explanation of TGI, see Appendix E of the manual, available at www.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/account/2007/manual/index.html.
See also Campus Group, Texas
Growth Index, and Appendix D.
Completion Rate: This indicator shows the status of a group (cohort) of students
after four years in high school. The cohort consists of students who first
attended ninth grade in 2002-03. They are followed through their expected graduation
as the Class of 2006. Any student who transferred into the 2002-03 cohort is
added to it, and any student who transfers out of the 2002-03 cohort is subtracted
from it.
- A student who transfers into the cohort is one who, for example, moves
into the cohort from another high school in Texas or from out of state.
- A student who transfers out of the cohort is one who, for example, moves
to another high school in Texas; note that these students are then transferred
into the cohort of the receiving high school and district. There are also
students who move out of the state or out of the country, or students who
transfer to private schools or who are home-schooled. These types of transfers
cannot be tracked and are taken out of the cohort.
- Students do not change cohorts even if they repeat a grade or skip a
grade. If they begin with the 2002-03 ninth grade cohort, they remain with
that cohort. This means, for example, that a student who started the ninth
grade in 2002-03, but takes 6 years to graduate (i.e., in May 2008) is
still part of the 2002-03 cohort; they are not switched to the 2004-05
cohort.
Other important information:
- Beginning with the 2007 accountability cycle, TEA began using a more
rigorous dropout definition, based on the federal definition. This affected
dropouts reported for the 2005-06 school year. Because dropouts are counted
according to the dropout definition in place the year they drop out, the
number of dropouts reported for that year was higher than it was for prior
years. That is, students in the class of 2006 who left school in 2005-06
were subject to a more rigorous dropout definition than the definition
that applied to students from the same class who left in previous years.
For this reason, in the 2007 accountability system a school leaver provision
was in place, stating that a campus or district rating cannot be lowered
because of performance on completion rate. See table below for changes
in leaver codes, and see also Appendix I of the 2007 Accountability
Manual for more information on the new dropout definition.
- As a result of using the more rigorous dropout definition for 2005-06,
the completion rates for the class of 2006 are, in most cases, lower than
those of the previous year.
- Special Education students who graduate with an Individualized Education
Program (IEP) are included as graduates.
- This indicator is computed and reported for districts as well as for
high schools that have had continuous enrollment in grades 9-12 since at
least the 2002-03 school year. Campuses that only serve some of these grades
and campuses that have been in existence for fewer than five years have
their district's rate substituted.
The four possible student outcomes are:
(1) Graduated. Based on the 2002-03 cohort, this shows the percent who received
their high school diploma on time or earlier - by the end of the 2005-06 school
year. It is calculated as follows:
number of students from the cohort who received a high school diploma by the
end of 2005-06 divided by
number of students in the 2002-03 cohort*
(2) Received GED. Based on the 2002-03 cohort, this shows the percentage
who received a General Educational Development certificate by August 31, 2006.
It is calculated as follows:
number of students from the cohort who received
a GED
divided by
number of students in the 2002-03 cohort*
(3) Continued High School. Based on the 2002-03 cohort, this shows
the percentage still enrolled as students in the fall of the 2006-07 school
year. It is calculated as follows:
number of students from the cohort who were
enrolled for the 2006-07 school year
divided by
number of students in the 2002-03 cohort*
(4) Dropped Out (4-yr). Based on the 2002-03 cohort, this shows the
percentage who dropped out and did not return by the fall of the 2006-07 school
year. It is calculated as follows:
number of students from the cohort who dropped
out before the fall of the 2006-07 school year
divided by
number of students in the 2002-03 cohort*
*The cohort in the denominator of the formulas shown above includes those students
who graduated, continued in school, received a GED, or dropped out. It does
not include data errors or leavers with the following leaver reason codes.
(Note that the leaver reason codes vary, based on year.)
Year |
Leaver reason codes NOT included |
2002-03 |
03, 16, 19, 21, 22, 24, 30, 31, 60, 61,
63, 64, 66, 72, 78, 80, 81, 82, 83 |
2003-04 |
03, 16, 19, 21, 22, 24, 30, 31, 60, 61,
63, 64, 66, 72, 78, 80, 81, 82, 83 |
2004-05 |
03, 16, 19, 21, 22, 24, 30, 31, 60, 61,
63, 64, 66, 72, 78, 80, 81, 82, 83 |
2005-06 |
03, 16, 24, 60, 66, 78, 81, 82, 83, 85,
86 |
These four outcomes sum to 100% (some totals may not equal exactly 100% due
to rounding).
For the 2006-07 AEIS reports, the Completion Rate is shown three different
ways:
- Completion/Student Status Rate. This shows all of the above measures
separately. The prior rate (class of 2005) is also shown.
- Completion Rate II (w/GED). This indicator sums together the first
three of the above outcomes: the percent of students in the 2002-03 cohort
who received their high school diplomas by the end of the 2005-06 school
year, those who received GEDs, and those who were still enrolled as high
school students for the 2006-07 school year. This rate is used for determining
the alternative education accountability ratings
- Completion Rate I (w/o GED). This indicator sums together the first
and third of the above outcomes: the percent of students in the 2002-03
cohort who received their high school diplomas by the end of the 2005-06
school year and those who were still enrolled as high school students for
the 2006-07 school year. This rate is used for determining the standard
accountability ratings.
Completion rates for districts serving Texas Youth Commission facilities do
not include students from the facilities unless the students have been attributed
to regular campuses in the district of service through campus of accountability
procedures.
For further information on these rates, see the report Secondary School
Completion and Dropouts in Texas Public Schools, 2005-06. (Sources: PEIMS, Oct. 2006,
June 2006, Oct. 2005, June 2005, Oct. 2004, June 2004, Oct. 2003, June 2003,
Oct. 2002, June 2002, June 2001, June 2000, and General Educational Development
Information File)
Completion/Student Status Rate: See Completion Rate.
Criterion Score: This refers to the scores on SAT and ACT college admissions
tests, the AP and IB tests, and the new college-ready indicator. For college
admissions tests, the criterion scores are at least 24 on the ACT (composite)
and at least 1110 on the SAT (total). For AP and IB tests, the criterion scores
are at least 3 on AP tests, and at least 4 on IB tests. For college-ready criterion
scores, see College-Ready Graduates.
Please note that each college and university establishes its own score criteria
for admitting or granting advanced placement or credit to individual students.
See also SAT/ACT Results and AP/IB Results.
Data Quality (District Profile only): The AEIS reports show the percent of
errors a district made in two key data submissions: 1) the PID Error rate in
PEIMS Student Data, and 2) the percent of Underreported Students in PEIMS Student
Leaver Data.
(1) PID Error Rate. The Person Identification Database (PID) system ensures
that each time information is collected for a student, the identifying information
matches other data collections for that student. This allows student data to
be linked, such as enrollment records, which are collected in October, to attendance
records, which are collected in June; or data to be matched across years. It
also helps maintain student confidentiality by assigning an ID that does not
divulge the student's identifying information.
During the data submission process each district has the ability to run PID
Discrepancy Reports that show any PID errors found. The district then has time
to correct the errors before its submission is finalized. While the PID error
rate has declined significantly over the years, any amount of error has a detrimental
effect on the calculation of longitudinal measures such as the four-year dropout
rate and the high school completion rate. The AEIS reports show the PID error
rate in PEIMS Student Data, collected in Submission 1 (Oct. 2006).
The rate is calculated as follows:
number of student PID errors found in PEIMS submission 1 (fall 2006)
divided by
number of student records in PEIMS submission 1 (fall 2006)
(2) Percent of Underreported Students. Underreported students are 7th-12th
graders who were enrolled at any time the prior year and who were not accounted
for through district records or TEA processing in the current year. A district
is required to submit a leaver record for any student served in grades 7-12
the previous year, unless the student received a GED certificate by August
31, is a previous Texas public school graduate, moved to another Texas public
school district, or returned to the district on time, or returned by the last
Friday in September. Leaver reasons include: graduated, died, or dropped out.
(For a more complete definition of leavers, see Leaver Records.)
The rate is calculated as follows:
number of underreported students
divided by
number of grade 7-12 students who were served in the district in the 2005-06
school year
Under the accountability system, there have been consequences for districts
that exceeded certain thresholds for this measure. However, for 2007, a school
leaver provision was in place in the accountability system that states a district
rating cannot be lowered because of performance on underreported students.
Distinguished Achievement Program: See RHSP/DAP
Graduates.
Dropout: A dropout is a student who is enrolled in public school in grades
7-12, does not return to public school the following fall, is not expelled,
and does not graduate, receive a GED, continue school outside the public school
system, begin college, or die.
Dropout counts are obtained from PEIMS records. Based on the attendance and
enrollment records of all districts, the records of Texas graduates for the
last several years, and GED certificate records, TEA identifies students for
whom districts do not need to submit leaver records. School districts must
account for all other students by submission of leaver reasons. The leaver
record provides 13 possible reasons for leaving school, including one which
indicates the student is a dropout (98).
This year for the first time, TEA used a more rigorous dropout definition,
based on the federal definition. See Appendix I of the 2007 Accountability
Manual for information on the new dropout definition. See also Annual
Dropout Rate. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Dropout Rate: See Annual Dropout Rate.
Economically Disadvantaged: The percent of economically
disadvantaged students is calculated as the sum of the students coded as
eligible for free or reduced-price lunch or eligible for other public assistance,
divided by the total number
of students:
number of students coded as eligible for free or reduced-price lunch or other
public assistance divided by
total number of students
See also Campus Group and Total Students. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005;
and TEA Student Assessment Division)
Educational Aides: Educational aides are staff who are reported with a role
of 033 (Educational Aide), 036 (Certified Interpreter), or 037 (Non-Certified
Interpreter). These aides are referred to as paraprofessional staff. The FTE
counts of educational aides are expressed as a percent of the total staff FTE.
(Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
English Language Learners Progress Measure: This indicator shows the percent
of current and monitored (former) limited English proficient (LEP) students
who meet any of the following criteria:
- the student meets the passing standard on the TAKS English reading/ELA
test,
- the student meets the proficiency level on the Reading Proficiency Tests
in English (RPTE) based on years in U.S. schools for first-time RPTE testers,
or
- the student shows progress on the RPTE from the prior year.
Other information:
- Spanish. Results from the Spanish TAKS tests are not included.
- TELPAS. Results from the Texas English Language Proficiency Assessment
System (TELPAS) Texas Observation Protocols (TOP) are not included.
- LEP. As is true for other AEIS indicators, the LEP column for this measure
is defined as current LEP students only, thus the All Students values and
the LEP students values for this indicator are not the same.
Two years of data are shown for purposes of comparison. See Appendix H for
a detailed summary of the English language learners progress measure. (Source:
TEA Student Assessment Division)
Enrollment: See Total Students.
Equity Transfers (2005-06) (District Profile only): The amount, "excluded
from revenues," is the expenditures reported by districts for reducing
their property wealth to the required equalized wealth level (function 91).
The amount, "excluded from expenditures," is the expenditures reported
by districts for the cost of reducing their property wealth to the required
equalized wealth level (function 91). Payments to Charter Schools (function
96) are also included in both items in this category.
Note this item is reported as actual expenditures, not budgeted. Accordingly,
the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See also Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Ethnic Distribution: Students are reported as White, African
American, Hispanic, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Native American. In the Profile section,
both counts and percentages of the total number of students in each of these
categories are shown. (Sources: PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005; The College Board;
ACT Inc.; The International Baccalaureate Organization; and TEA Student Assessment
Division)
FTE: Full-Time Equivalent.
Fund Balance Information (District Profile only): The amount of undesignated,
unreserved fund balance that existed at the end of the 2005-06 school year
is reported for each district.
The unreserved fund balance is not legally restricted and has two components:
designated and undesignated. The designated component requires local board
action to earmark the balance for bona fide purposes that will be fulfilled
within a reasonable period of time. The undesignated component is available
to finance monthly operating expenditures.
The amount reported in the AEIS report is the undesignated component, calculated
as the difference between the total unreserved fund balance and the designated
unreserved fund balance. This balance amount is expressed as a percent of the
total budgeted expenditures (for the general fund) for the current year (2006-07)
as specified in statute.
A district can have a negative undesignated, unreserved fund balance when the
district's reserved fund balance is greater than the district's total fund
balance.
Note that while other finance items are now reported as actual, fund balance
information is still expressed as a percent of total budgeted expenditures
for the current year as required in statute. (Source: Financial Audit Report,
Jan. 2007)
General Fund: This is a governmental fund used for operations of on-going organizations
and activities. The amounts reported in this fund classification are reported
separately from All Funds. General fund reporting includes fund codes 101-199
and 420. Fund 420, Foundation School Program and Other State Aid, is included
in the general fund for charter schools only.
Note that all financial data shown by fund is actual data, not budgeted. Accordingly,
the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See also Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Gold Performance Acknowledgment: A school or district may qualify for Gold
Performance Acknowledgment for their students' performance on the following
indicators:
- Advanced Course/Dual Enrollment Completion
- AP/IB Examination Results
- Attendance Rate
- Commended Performance on TAKS: Reading/English Language Arts
- Commended Performance on TAKS: Mathematics
- Commended Performance on TAKS: Writing
- Commended Performance on TAKS: Science
- Commended Performance on TAKS: Social Studies
- Comparable Improvement: Reading/ English Language Arts (campus only)
- Comparable Improvement: Mathematics (campus only)
- Recommended High School Program/Distinguished Achievement Program
- SAT/ACT Results (College Admissions Tests)
- TSI - Higher Education Readiness Component: English Language Arts
- TSI - Higher Education Readiness Component: Mathematics
Schools and districts receive one of three possible categories for each indicator.
Acknowledged signifies they met the Gold Performance standard for the indicator;
Does Not Qualify signifies that they were evaluated but did not meet the standard
for the indicator or that the school or district was Academically Unacceptable;
Not Applicable signifies there were no data to be evaluated for the indicator,
usually due to the grades served by the district or campus. Schools labeled
as Not Rated: Other, or districts labeled Not Rated: Data Integrity
Issues are not evaluated for Gold Performance Acknowledgment and are noted as Not
Applicable. Schools and charter operators evaluated under AEA procedures are
not eligible for GPA.
Refer to chapter 5 in the 2007 Accountability Manual for detailed information
on the standards for Gold Performance Acknowledgment.
See also Advanced Course/Dual Enrollment Completion, AP/IB
Results, Attendance
Rate, Comparable Improvement, RHSP/DAP
Graduates, SAT/ACT Results, Texas
Success Initiative (TSI) - Higher Education Readiness Component, and TAKS.
Graduates (Class of 2006): In the Profile section, this is the total number
of graduates (including summer graduates) for the 2005-06 school year, as reported
by districts in the fall of 2006. The value includes 12th graders who graduated
as well as graduates from other grades. Students in special education who graduate
are included in the totals, and are also reported as a separate group. Counts
of students graduating under the recommended high school or distinguished achievement
programs are also shown.
Students graduating with the class of 2006 could be coded with one of the following
graduation types:
- Minimum High School Program
- Recommended High School Program
- Distinguished Achievement Program
- Special Education student completing an IEP
Counts of graduates are calculated slightly differently for three graduation-related
indicators on the Performance section of the AEIS report:
- SAT/ACT results do not indicate whether the examinee is served in special
education; therefore, there is no way to know if a student taking the SAT
or ACT is served in special education. However, because relatively fewer
students served in special education take college admissions tests, only
non-special education graduates are included in the denominator.
- The RHSP/DAP (Recommended High School Program/Distinguished Achievement
Program) indicator as well as the new College-Ready Graduates indicator
include all graduates, special education and non-special education, in
both the numerator and denominator.
See also College-Ready Graduates, Completion
Rate, and RHSP/DAP Graduates. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Instructional Expenditure Ratio (2005-06) (District Profile
only): This measure,
required by TEC 44.0071, indicates the percentage of the district's total actual
expenditures for the 2005-06 fiscal year that were used to fund direct instructional
activities. The instructional expenditure ratio is a district-level only measure,
and is calculated as follows:
expenditures reported in function codes 11, 12, 13, 31 and object codes 6112
through 6499
divided by
expenditures reported in function codes 11-52, 92, and 95 and object codes
6112 through 6499
Contact the School Financial Audits Division at (512) 463-9095 for further
details on this measure. See Appendix B for function and expenditure code labels. (Source: PEIMS, March 2007)
Instructional Staff Percent (District Profile only): This measure, required
by TEC 44.0071, indicates the percentage of the district's full-time equivalent
employees whose job function was to directly provide classroom instruction
to students during the 2006-07 school year. The instructional staff percent
is a district-level only measure, and is calculated as follows.
total number of hours district staff reported under expenditure
object
codes 6112, 6119, and 6129, and function codes 11, 12, 13, and 31
divided
by
total number of hours worked by all district employees
Contact the School Financial Audits Division at (512) 463-9095 for further
details about this measure. See Appendix A. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
International Baccalaureate (IB): See AP/IB Results.
Leaver Record: Leaver reporting changed significantly for this year. In the
past, districts were required to report on all 7th through 12th grade students
who were enrolled or in attendance at any point during the prior year but did
not re-enroll the following year. Beginning with the PEIMS submissions during
the 2006-07 school year, TEA identifies students for whom districts do not
need to submit leaver records, by reviewing attendance and enrollment records
of all districts, the records of Texas graduates for the last several years,
and GED certificate records. School districts must account for all other students
by submission of leaver reasons. This group of "leavers" includes
students such as those who graduated, moved to another state, or country, died,
or dropped out. This information is sent to TEA in Submission 1 of the annual
PEIMS data collection.
Also, beginning with the leaver collection for the 2005-06 school year (PEIMS
submission 1 of the fall of 2006) TEA is using a more rigorous dropout definition,
based on the federal definition. As a result, numerous leaver codes were deleted,
consolidated, or changed.
See Appendix I of the 2007 Accountability Manual for more detailed information
on the new dropout definition. See also Data Quality. (Source: PEIMS, Oct.
2006; Secondary School Completion and Dropouts in Texas Public Schools, 2005-06,
Texas Education Agency)
Limited English Proficient (LEP): These are students identified as limited
English proficient by the Language Proficiency Assessment Committee (LPAC)
according to criteria established in the Texas Administrative Code. Not all
pupils identified as LEP receive bilingual or English as a second language
instruction, although most do. In the Profile section of the reports, the percent
of LEP students is calculated by dividing the number of LEP pupils by the total
number of students in the school or district.
The LEP column in the Performance section shows the performance of students
identified as LEP in the current year only; students who are no longer considered
limited English proficient are not included in this column.
See Campus Group and TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt
Participation. (Source: PEIMS,
Oct. 2006)
Met Standard: This refers to the TAKS passing standard set by the State Board
of Education for each TAKS subject and grade. For a detailed explanation, see
TAKS Panel Recommendation.
Mobile: This measure, which is part of the TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt
Participation section of the AEIS, indicates the percent of student test results not included
in the accountability system because the students move to a different school
or district between the fall and spring.
Note that this measure is different from Mobility, which is defined below.
See also Accountability Subset.
Mobility (Campus Profile only): A student is considered to be mobile if he
or she has been in membership at the school for less than 83% of the school
year (i.e., has missed six or more weeks at a particular school).
number
of mobile students in 2005-06
divided by
number of students who were in membership at any time during the 2005-06
school year
This rate is calculated at the campus level. The mobility rate shown in the
Profile section of campus reports under the "district" column is
based on the count of mobile students identified at the campus level. That
is, the district mobility rate reflects school-to-school mobility, within the
same district or from outside the district. See also Campus Group. (Source:
PEIMS, June 2006)
n/a: This indicates that data are not available or are not applicable.
Number of Students per Teacher: This shows the total number of students divided by the total teacher FTE count. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Paired Schools: For accountability purposes, schools that reported enrollment
but did not have grades in which the state-mandated test was given (e.g. K-2
schools) are paired with schools with which they have a "feeder" relationship
to determine accountability ratings. For example, assuming Travis Primary (K-2)
feeds students into Navarro Elementary (3-5), the district would pair these
two schools for accountability purposes. This means that the TAKS performance
of Navarro Elementary is also used for rating Travis Primary and is reported
on the AEIS report for Travis Primary.
Panel Recommendation: See TAKS Panel Recommendation.
PBM Special Education Monitoring Results Status: This label appears on the
cover of AEIS reports for districts with a special education monitoring status.
For a complete explanation of each label, see Appendix G.
Performance of Mobile Students (State Performance only): This
additional report shows the aggregate state-level performance of students who
were excluded from the district accountability subset due to mobility across
districts between October and the time of testing. It is calculated for each
TAKS subject as:
number of mobile students who passed each test
divided by
number of mobile students tested
Mobile student results are shown at www.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/aeis/2007/state.html.
Scroll down to Performance of Mobile Students (past the TAKS indicators) and
click on the link.
The report shows performance by subject summed across all grades tested. For
purposes of comparison, Performance of Mobile Students is shown for 2007 and
2006. This indicator is not available at the region, district, or campus level.
See also Mobile. (Source: TEA Student Assessment Division)
Professional Staff: This is a full-time equivalent (FTE) count of teachers,
professional support staff, campus administrators, and, on the district profile,
central administrators. Staff are grouped according to the PEIMS roles reported.
Each type of professional staff is shown as a percentage of the total staff
FTE. See also Appendix A. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Progress of Prior Year TAKS Failers (Sum of Grades 4 - 11): This indicator
provides two measures that show the progress of students who failed the reading/ELA
portion or the mathematics portion of the TAKS in the prior year.
(1) Percent of Failers Passing TAKS. Of the students who failed the TAKS in
the prior year, this measure shows the percent that passed the corresponding
assessment in the current year.
For 2007, the reported values for reading/ELA and mathematics are calculated
as:
number of matched students who failed in 2006 but passed in 2007 divided by
number of matched students who failed in 2006
Note that these students-who passed the TAKS in 2007-were subject to the panel
recommendation standard at all grade levels, including grade 11.
(2) Average TGI Growth. For students who failed the TAKS in the prior year,
this measure shows their average growth (or change) between the prior year
and current year.
For 2007, the reported values for reading/ELA and mathematics are calculated
as:
sum of individual student TGI values for students who failed in 2006 divided by
total number of students with TGI values who failed in 2006
For 2007, students included in these measures are those who:
- took the spring 2007 TAKS reading/ELA and/or mathematics tests in grades
4-11 (progress is not calculated for third grade test takers since that
is their first TAKS test);
- are part of the 2007 Accountability Subset;
- can be matched to the spring 2006 TAKS administration-anywhere in the
state-to find their prior year score for reading/ELA and/or mathematics;
- failed the 2006 TAKS administration of reading/ELA and/or mathematics
(using the 2006 student-level passing standard).
Reports for both these measures by grade are available for each district and
campus on the internet, within the AEIS report that appears on the Division
of Performance Reporting's website. To view these reports, access the HTML
version of a campus or district report from the AEIS site (www.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/aeis/2007/).
The link below Progress of Prior Year TAKS Failers produces a separate report
that provides the progress of prior year failers by grade. See also Texas
Growth Index in this Glossary. For a more complete explanation of the Texas
Growth Index, see Appendix E in the 2007 Accountability Manual. (Source: TEA Student
Assessment Division)
Reading Proficiency Tests in English (RPTE): See English
Language Learner Progress Measure. Beginning in 2007-08, RPTE will be referred to as Texas English Language
Proficiency Assessment System (TELPAS) reading.
Recommended High School Program: See RHSP/DAP Graduates.
Retention Rates by Grade: The retention rate, reported in the Profile section,
shows the percent of students in Texas public schools who enrolled in the fall
of 2006-07 in the same grade as their grade in the last reported six-week period
of the prior year (2005-06). It is calculated as follows:
total students not advanced to the next grade divided by
total students advanced to the next grade + total students not advanced to
the next grade
Note that all special education retention rates are calculated and reported
separately from the rates of non-special education students because local retention
practices appear to differ greatly between these two populations of students.
The AEIS report only shows retention rates for grades K-8. Retention rates
for all grades may be found in Grade-Level Retention in Texas Public Schools,
2005-06, available from TEA. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006, June 2006)
RHSP/DAP Graduates: This indicator shows the percent of graduates who were
reported as having satisfied the course requirements for the Texas State Board
of Education Recommended High School Program or Distinguished Achievement Program.
It is calculated as follows:
number of graduates reported with graduation codes for
Recommended High School
Program or Distinguished Achievement Program
divided by
number of graduates
RHSP graduates are students with type codes of 10, 14, 15, 19, 22, or 25; DAP
graduates are students with type codes of 09, 16, 17, 20, 23, or 26. See the
PEIMS Data Standards for more information.
Schools and districts may qualify for Gold Performance Acknowledgment based
on their RHSP/DAP rate. For a more detailed explanation of Gold Performance
Acknowledgment, see the 2007 Accountability Manual. See also Graduates. (Source:
PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005)
SAT/ACT Results: These include the College Board's SAT and ACT, Inc.'s ACT
Assessment. Both testing companies annually provide the agency with testing
information on the most recent test participation and performance of graduating
seniors from all Texas public schools. Only one record is sent per student.
If a student takes an ACT or SAT test more than once, the agency receives the
record for the most recent examination taken.
Three values are calculated for this indicator:
(1) Tested. This shows the percent of graduates who took either college admissions
test:
number of graduates who took either the SAT or the ACT divided by
number of non-special education graduates
Note that "graduates" in the denominator of equation (1) does not
include special education graduates; however, special education graduates who
took either the SAT or ACT are included in the numerator. (See Graduates.)
(2) At/Above Criterion. This shows the percent of examinees who scored at or
above the criterion score on either test (1110 on the SAT, or 24 on the ACT):
number of examinees who scored at or above criterion divided by
number of examinees
(3) Mean Score. This shows the average (mean) score for the SAT total and the
mean score for the ACT composite, calculated as follows:
total score (mathematics plus critical reading) for all students who took the
SAT divided by
number of students who took the SAT
and
total composite score for all students who took the ACT
divided by
number of students who took the ACT
Despite the addition of the writing portion of the SAT, the criterion score
continues to be based on mathematics and critical reading only.
Schools and districts may qualify for Gold Performance Acknowledgment based
on their SAT/ACT performance and participation. For a more detailed explanation
of Gold Performance Acknowledgment, see the 2007 Accountability
Manual. See
also Criterion Score. (Sources: The College Board, Aug. 2006, Jan. 2006; ACT,
Inc. (ACT) Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005; and PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005)
School Type: For purposes of creating the Campus Groups, schools are placed
into one of four classifications based on the lowest and highest grades in
which students are enrolled (i.e. in membership) at the school: elementary,
middle (including junior high school), secondary, and both
elementary/secondary (K-12). Generally speaking, elementaries are PK-5 or PK-6, middle schools are
6-8, and secondary schools are 9-12. Schools whose grade spans do not exactly
match these, are grouped with the school type most similar to their grade span.
SDAA II: See State-Developed Alternative Assessment II.
SEM: See Standard Error of Measurement.
Special Education: This refers to the population served by programs for students
with disabilities. Assessment decisions for students in special education programs
are made by their Admission, Review, and Dismissal (ARD) committee. The ARD
committee is made up of their parent(s) or guardian, teacher, administrator,
and other concerned parties. In the 2006-07 school year, a student in special
education may have been administered the TAKS, SDAA II, TAKS-Alt, or TAKS-I
tests. If they were exempted from all state-administered tests, they must have
been assessed using a locally-determined alternate assessment (LDAA). Results
from LDAA tests are not reported on the AEIS reports.
Other indicators that include the performance of students in special education
are: advanced course/dual enrollment completion, attendance rate, annual dropout
rates, college-ready graduates, completion rate, RHSP/DAP, ELL Progress Measure,
TAKS exit-level cumulative pass rate, and the Texas Success Initiative. Information
that would allow the separation of performance of special education students
on college admissions tests and on Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate
examinations is not available. Note that in the Profile section of the report,
retention rates are shown separately for special education and non-special
education students. See also State-Developed Alternative Assessment II and
TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct.
2005, and TEA Student Assessment Division)
Special Education Compliance Status: See PBM Special Education Monitoring Results
Status.
Staff Exclusions: These are counts of individuals who serve public school students,
but are not included in the FTE totals for any of the other employee statistics.
There are two types of these entries: individuals participating in a shared
services arrangement and individuals on contract with the district to provide
instructional services. Shared Services Arrangement (SSA) Staff work in schools
located in districts other than their employing district, or their assigned
organization (in PEIMS) shows a code of 751, indicating that they are employed
by the fiscal agent of an SSA. Only the portion of a person's total FTE amount
associated with the school in another district (or with the 751 organization
code) is counted as SSA. SSA staff are grouped into three categories: Professional
Staff (which includes teachers, administrators, and professional support);
Educational Aides; and Auxiliary Staff. Note that SSA Auxiliary Staff are identified
by the type of fund from which they are paid. Contracted Instructional
Staff (District and Campus Profiles) refers to counts of instructors for whom the
district has entered into a contractual agreement with some outside organization.
Through the contract, the outside organization has committed to supplying instructional
staff for the district. They are never employees of the reporting school district.
(Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Standard Error of Measurement (SEM): A way to understand the standard error
of measurement as it relates to tests is the following:
If a single student were to take the same test repeatedly (with no new learning
taking place between testings and no memory of questions), the standard deviation
of his/her repeated test scores is denoted as the standard error of measurement.
The TAKS transition plan implemented by the State Board of Education used the
standard error of measurement to phase in the student passing standard over
three years (2002-03 to 2004-05 for grades 3-10). The grade 11 standard moved
to panel recommendation in 2005-06 and remains so for 2006-07. The newest assessment,
grade 8 science, was at was at 2 SEM in 2006, 1 SEM in 2007, and will be at
panel recommendation for the spring 2008 administration. For a complete explanation
of the plan, see TAKS Panel Recommendation. (Source: TEA Student Assessment
Division)
Standardized Local Tax Base (comptroller valuation) (District
Profile only): The Comptroller conducts a study each year that uniformly evaluates the property
values within school district boundaries. Locally assessed values may vary
from the Comptroller's study values. The values certified by the Comptroller's
Property Tax Division (Comptroller Valuation) are standardized in that they
are deemed to be comparable across the state. Note that the values shown are
final for tax year 2006. This is not the property value used for school funding
calculations.
- Value (after exemptions). This refers to the market value of all property
in a district, minus certain exemptions and deductions. The value after
exemptions reflects deductions for the state-mandated homestead exemptions,
the disabled veterans' exemptions, the school tax ceiling for homeowners
over age 65 or disabled, and other state-mandated exemptions.
- Value per Pupil. This refers to school district property value, or Standardized
Local Tax Base, divided by the total number of students. This
per pupil figure is one definition of "wealth." Note that the
values shown are final for tax year 2006. At the state level, the per pupil
amount is created by dividing by the total number of students in districts
with property value. Some districts do not have property value; their students
are not included.
- Value by Category. This shows aggregates of individual property tax
categories expressed as a percent of the Comptroller's property value before
the exemptions are applied. Thus, the sum of the category values will exceed
the value used for per pupil calculations. Note that the values shown are
final for tax year 2006.
- Business -
- real property: commercial and industrial;
- real and tangible personal property: utilities; and
- personal property: commercial and industrial.
- Residential - real property: single-family, residential; multifamily,
residential; and inventory.
- Land - real property: vacant lots and tracts; acreage at market
value, and farm and ranch improvements; acreage at productivity value.
- Oil and Gas - real property: oil, gas, and other minerals.
- Other - tangible personal property: other; and intangible personal
property.
(Source: Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, July 2007)
State-Developed Alternative Assessment II (SDAA II): This test assesses special
education students in Grades 3-10 who are receiving instruction in the Texas
Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) but for whom TAKS is not an appropriate
measure of their academic progress.
SDAA II tests are given in the areas of reading/ELA, writing, and mathematics,
in grades 3-10. Students are assessed at their appropriate instructional levels,
as determined by their Admission, Review, and Dismissal (ARD) committees. The
SDAA II is administered on the same schedule as TAKS.
Two indicators are reported for SDAA II:
(1) SDAA II Examinations Met ARD Expectations: This is a single measure showing
the percent of SDAA II tests that met ARD expectations, summed across grades
(3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, or 10th) and subjects (reading/ELA, writing,
and/or mathematics):
number of SDAA II tests meeting ARD expectations divided by
number of SDAA II tests taken
This indicator was used in determining the 2007 state accountability ratings
for campuses and districts.
(2) SDAA II Examinees Met ARD Expectations: This shows the percent of SDAA
II examinees who met ARD expectations on each subject area test, summed across
the grades tested:
number of SDAA II examinees meeting ARD expectations, by subject divided by
number of SDAA II examinees, by subject
Other important information:
-
All Tests Taken. The second indicator—(2) above—also shows the percent
meeting expectations on all tests taken. That is, if a grade 4 student meets
expectations on his mathematics and reading tests but fails to meet expectations
on the writing test, then he has not met expectations on all tests taken.
-
Accountability Subset. Only the SDAA II performance of students
who were part of the Accountability Subset are included. For more information
on SDAA II and accountability, refer to the 2007 Accountability Manual.
-
Last year for SDAA II. The spring of 2007 was the last administration
of the SDAA II. Beginning with the 2007-08 school year, students may take
the TAKS, TAKS (Accommodated), TAKS-Modified, or TAKS-Alternate. For more
information on how these assessments will affect a school or district's
future accountability ratings, see chapters 16 and 17 of the 2007 Accountability
Manual.
See also Accountability Subset, and TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA
II/TAKS-Alt Participation. (Source: TEA Student Assessment Division)
Student Enrollment by Program: Students are identified as served in programs
and/or courses for Special Education, Career and Technology Education, Bilingual/ESL
Education, or Gifted and Talented Education. The percentages do not sum to
100, as a student may be enrolled in more than one of these programs. (Source:
PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Student Success Initiative (SSI): In 1999, as part of the mandate for the new
TAKS tests, the Texas Legislature included new grade advancement testing requirements.
For the 2006-07 school year, students in 3rd grade needed to pass the reading
portion of the TAKS in order to be promoted to the 4th grade, and students
in 5th grade needed to pass both the reading and mathematics portions of the
TAKS in order to be promoted to 6th grade. Students were given three opportunities
to pass each required test. In addition to promotion based on passing the test,
some students were promoted based on the recommendation of their grade placement
committee (GPC). The committee members needed to agree that the student was
likely to perform on grade level after receiving accelerated instruction. The
AEIS report shows four measures for this indicator:
(1) Students Requiring Accelerated Instruction. For each subject and grade,
this shows the percent of students who did not pass the first administration
of the TAKS. Students who did not pass the test during the first administration
must be provided accelerated instruction in preparation for the second administration:
number of eligible students who did not meet the standard in the first administration divided by number of eligible students in the first administration
The number of eligible students is calculated from the test answer documents
and includes all students who were tested, students who should have been tested
but were absent, and students who were not tested for other reasons. (The count
of eligible students does not include students who have a special education
or LEP exemption.) Students who were absent during the first administration
or were not tested for other reasons are included in the counts of students
requiring accelerated instruction.
(2) TAKS Cumulative Met Standard. For each subject and grade, this shows the
cumulative (and unduplicated) percent of students who took and passed the tests
in the first and second administrations combined:
number of students who passed the test in either of the first two administrations divided by
cumulative number of students who took the test in either of the first two
administrations
The values shown for this measure are the ones used in determining state accountability
ratings. In most cases, this value does not match the TAKS performance shown
by grade in the first few pages of this AEIS report. The "by grade" results
are based on the first administration of each test only.
(3) TAKS Failers Promoted by Grade Placement Committee. This shows the percent
of students who failed all attempts to pass but were promoted to the next grade
by their grade placement committee:
number of students promoted by their GPC divided by
cumulative number of students who failed all administrations
(4) TAKS Met Standard/SDAA II Met ARD Expectations (Failed in Previous Year).
This presents two calculations for students who failed in 2006.
For those who were promoted, the first measure shows the percentage who passed
the TAKS in 2007. Using grade 5 reading as an example, the calculation is as
follows:
number of students promoted by their GPC who passed grade 6 TAKS reading in
2007
divided by
number of students who were promoted by their GPC and took grade 6 TAKS reading
For those who were retained, the second measure shows the percentage who passed
the TAKS in 2007. Using grade 5 reading as an example, the calculation is as
follows:
number of students retained who passed grade 5 TAKS reading in 2007 divided by
number of students retained and took grade 5 TAKS reading in 2007
The values include results from both the English and Spanish versions of the
TAKS and also include results of students who were administered SDAA II tests
in the subsequent year.
Note that the highest grade served in many elementary schools is grade 5. In
these cases, only the performance of 5th graders who were retained will be
reported. The performance of the students promoted to 6th grade will appear
in the middle school report.
Students in grade 8 will have to pass the reading and mathematics tests beginning
in 2007-08. For more information on the Student Success Initiative, go to the
website for TEA's Student Assessment Division at www.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/.
(Source: TEA Student Assessment Division)
Students by Grade: Percentages are calculated by dividing the number of students
in each grade by the total number of students. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Students with Disciplinary Placements: Counts and percents of students placed
in alternative education programs under Chapter 37 of the Texas Education Code
(Discipline; Law and Order) are shown (for the 2005-06 school year) in the
AEIS reports. Disciplinary placement counts are obtained from PEIMS records.
Districts report the disciplinary actions taken toward students who are removed
from the classroom for at least one day. Although students can have multiple
removals throughout the year, this measure counts students only once and includes
only those whose removal results in a placement in a disciplinary alternative
education program or juvenile justice alternative education program. It is
calculated as follows:
number of students with one or more disciplinary placements divided by
number of students who were in attendance at any time during the school year
The following 19 reason codes on the PEIMS 425 record are included as disciplinary
placements: 02, 03, 04, 07, 08, 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 57,
59, 60, and 61. (Source: PEIMS, June 2006)
TAKS (Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills): The Texas Assessment of Knowledge
and Skills (TAKS) is a comprehensive testing program for public school students
in grades 3-11. The TAKS is designed to measure to what extent a student has
learned, understood, and is able to apply the important concepts and skills
expected at each tested grade level.
The grades and subjects shown on the AEIS reports are:
- Grade 3 - reading (first administration only) and mathematics
- Grade 4 - reading, mathematics, and writing
- Grade 5 - reading (first administration only), mathematics (first administration
only), and science
- Grade 6 - reading and mathematics
- Grade 7 - reading, mathematics, and writing
- Grade 8 - reading, mathematics, science, and social studies
- Grade 9 - reading and mathematics
- Grade 10 - English language arts, mathematics, science, and social studies
- Grade 11 - English language arts, mathematics, science, and social studies.
These tests are known as the exit-level test; students are required to
pass them in order to qualify for graduation from high school.
All TAKS tests in grades 3 through 6 are available in either English or Spanish.
The AEIS reports show performance on these separately.
Each one of these tests is linked directly to the Texas Essential Knowledge
and Skills (TEKS) curriculum. The TEKS is the state-mandated curriculum for
Texas public school students. Essential knowledge and skills taught at each
grade build upon the material learned in previous grades. For more information
on TEKS, see the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills website at www.tea.state.tx.us/teks/.
For 2006-07, the AEIS report shows percent passing TAKS in several ways. Below
are key definitions:
-
TAKS Met 2007 Standard, By Grade. The first indicator shown on the report is
percent passing TAKS by grade for each subject area and for all tests taken.
Please note the following:
- Student Success Initiative. Only performance from the first administration
of grade 3 and 5 reading and grade 5 mathematics is shown by grade. Results
that include the second administration can be found on the AEIS reports
under Student Success Initiative: TAKS Cumulative Met Standard.
- TAKS-Inclusive. Performance on the TAKS-I is not included
in the performance shown by grade.
- Grade 8 Science. Performance on the second-year of this
test is shown at a passing standard of 1 SEM below Panel Recommendation
(scale score of 2041). In 2008-the first year it is used for accountability-it
will be set at Panel Recommendation (scale score of 2100).
- Test Administrations Included. The results shown are for
the first administration in the spring for grades 3-10. Students in
grade 11 usually take the exit-level test for the first time in the
spring semester of their junior year. However, under certain circumstances
they may take the test for the first time in the previous October.
The performance of these early testers is included in the results shown
on the AEIS if they took and passed all four tests.
- All Tests Taken. As described above, the number of tests
given varies by grade. This means that the number of tests included
in "All Tests Taken" varies
by grade.
-
Sum of All Grades Tested. Three indicators are shown which sum
TAKS results (by subject) across grades.
- TAKS Met 2007 Standard (Sum of All Grades Tested, EXCLUDING grade 8 Science
and TAKS-I) (Standard Accountability Indicator). This is the accountability
indicator used for campuses and districts evaluated under standard procedures.
It includes the cumulative passing rate from the first and second administrations
for grade 3 reading and grade 5 reading and mathematics. Performance on
grade 8 science is not included, nor is performance on any of the TAKS-I
assessments.
- TAKS Met 2008 Standard (Sum of All Grades Tested, INCLUDING grade 8 Science
and TAKS-I) (2008 Preview at Panel Recommendation). This measure
is provided as a preview of performance in 2008. There are two major
differences between this performance and the one used as the standard
accountability indicator: It includes the performance of students taking
grade 8 science, at panel recommendation, as well as the TAKS-I performance
for ELA (grade 11), mathematics (grade 11), science (grades 5 - English
and Spanish, 8, 10, and 11), and social studies (grades 8, 10, and
11). See TAKS-Inclusive and TAKS
Panel Recommendation for additional
information.
- TAKS Commended Performance (Sum of All Grades Tested, EXCLUDING grade 8 Science
and TAKS-I). This measure refers to the highest performance level
on the TAKS, a scale score of 2400, as set by the State Board of Education.
Students who achieve Commended Performance have shown a thorough understanding
of the knowledge and skills at their grade level. Schools and districts
may qualify for Gold Performance Acknowledgment based on their TAKS
Commended Performance on reading/ELA, writing, mathematics, social
studies, and science. Because the accountability system did not include
grade 8 science or TAKS-I results, the commended performance evaluated
for GPA also excludes these results. For a more detailed explanation
of Gold Performance Acknowledgment, see the 2007
Accountability Manual.
Other important information:
-
Sum of all grades tested. This refers to the grades tested at the particular
school. For example, the percent passing reading in an elementary school with
a grade span of K-5 is calculated as follows:
number of students who passed the reading test in grades 3, 4, & 5
divided by
number of students who took the reading test in grades 3, 4, & 5
- Rounding of Met Standard Percent. TAKS performance on the AEIS is rounded to
whole numbers. For example, 49.877% is rounded to 50%; 79.4999% is rounded
to 79%; and 89.5% is rounded to 90%.
-
Masking for Very High and Very Low Performance. Since 2004, more
stringent masking rules have applied to results for the TAKS and SDAA II
tests. In cases where performance is at or near 100%, the value is shown
as ">99%." In
cases where performance is at or near 0%, the value is shown as "<1%." It
is necessary to mask data that potentially reveals the performance of every
student in order to be in compliance with the federal Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA).
-
Accountability Subset. Only test takers who were enrolled on the
last Friday in the previous October are included in the calculations shown
on the AEIS reports. This is referred to as the "October subset" or
the Accountability Subset. For the district, a student who moved into the
district after October 27, 2006 would not have their performance included
at the district level. At the campus level, a student who changed to a
different campus within the same district after October 27, 2006 would
not have their performance included at that school, though it would be
included at the district level. See Accountability Subset for more information.
-
All Tests Taken. Although All Tests Taken is not a measure evaluated
for accountability ratings purposes, it is shown on the AEIS report, both "by grade" and "summed
across grades." This value shows the percent of students who passed
every test they took. For example, a group of 100 students tested in reading
and mathematics at the 3rd grade might have the following results: 90 students
passed reading and 80 students passed mathematics. However, only 75 of
those students passed BOTH reading and mathematics. For this reason, while
the percent passing reading would be 90%, and the percent passing mathematics
would be 80%, the percent passing All Tests Taken would be only 75%, not
an average of 80% and 90%. All Tests Taken is always equal to or less than
the percent of students who passed any of the individual subject areas.
The more tests taken and considered for this measure, the more likely the
All Tests Taken value will be lower than any of the individual subject
areas.
See also Appendix F and TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA
II/TAKS-Alt Participation. (Source:
TEA Student Assessment Division)
TAKS (Accommodated): See TAKS-Inclusive.
TAKS-Alternate (TAKS-Alt): This is an assessment based on alternate academic
standards and is designed for students with significant cognitive disabilities.
Students served in special education programs who met participation requirements
were administered the TAKS-Alt field test in spring 2007. These field test
results are not reported on the 2006-07 AEIS. However, participation in the
field test is shown in the TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation section
of the reports. The earliest possible use of the TAKS-Alt results in the state
accountability system is 2010. See the Student Assessment Division website
for more information, at www.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/.
TAKS Commended Performance: See TAKS.
TAKS Exit-level Cumulative Pass Rate (District Performance
only): The TAKS
cumulative pass rate shows the percent of students who first took the TAKS
exit-level test in spring 2006, and eventually passed all TAKS tests taken
(in the same district) by spring 2007. (Students who failed the first time
had four additional opportunities to retake test(s) before their graduation
date.) This measure is intended to show the relative success of districts in
their efforts to help all their students pass the exit-level TAKS, which is
a requirement for graduation from Texas public schools.
Test takers included in the TAKS Exit-level Cumulative Pass Rate for the class
of 2007:
- Any student who took the test for the first time in spring 2006.
- All special education students who took the test.
- All above students, whether or not they were in the Accountability Subset.
Test takers NOT included in the TAKS Exit-level Cumulative Pass Rate:
- Students who first took the exit-level test in District A, did not pass
all sections and then moved to District B and retested. These students
are taken out of both the numerator and denominator, whether or not they
eventually passed all tests taken.
- Students who moved out of state, left the country, or died before passing
all tests taken. These students are in the denominator but not the numerator.
They cannot be removed because they are not specifically identified in
the data.
- Students who dropped out of school before passing all tests taken are
in the denominator but not the numerator.
- Students who moved into the state after the spring of 2006 are not included,
even if they took the TAKS and graduated with the class of 2007.
(Source: TEA Student Assessment Division)
TAKS Inclusive (TAKS-I) (Known as TAKS (Accommodated)
beginning in 2007-08): The TAKS includes a form called TAKS-I for students served by special education
who meet the eligibility requirements for certain specific accommodations.
The TAKS-I has the same test items as the TAKS, but includes format accommodations
(e.g. larger font, fewer items per page) and contains no embedded field-test
items. Since 2006, students who qualified could take TAKS-I in subjects and
grades where the SDAA II was not available - ELA (grade 11), mathematics (grade
11), science (grades 5 (English and Spanish), 8, 10, and 11), and social studies
(grades 8, 10, and 11).
This year, performance on TAKS-I is not shown separately on the AEIS reports;
rather, it is included in the TAKS Met 2008 Standard Preview Indicator. See
also TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation. (Source: TEA Student Assessment
Division)
TAKS Met Standard: This refers to the TAKS passing standard. For a detailed
explanation, see TAKS Panel Recommendation below. See also Appendix F.
TAKS-Modified (TAKS-M): This is an alternate assessment based on modified academic
achievement standards. It is being developed for the 2007-08 school year to
meet the federal requirements for the 2% policy to assess certain students
with disabilities. This test will be for students who do not meet the participation
requirements for TAKS-Alt and for whom regular TAKS or TAKS (Accommodated)
is not appropriate. The TAKS-M results will be reported in AEIS for the first
time in 2008. However, the earliest possible use for the TAKS-M results in
state accountability is in 2010. See TEA's Student Assessment Division website
for more information: www.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/.
TAKS Panel Recommendation: This refers to the final phased-in passing standard
set by the SBOE for the TAKS. In November 2002, the State Board of Education
adopted two performance standards for the TAKS: Met Standard (i.e. passing)
and Commended Performance (i.e. high performance). These standards were adopted
based on recommendations from educators and citizens who served on TAKS standard-setting
panels. Because the TAKS is more challenging than its predecessor, the Texas
Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS), the Board agreed to a transition plan
to phase in Met Standard over several years. (Commended Performance has no
phase-in period.)
The transition plan used the standard error of measurement (SEM) to phase in
the panel's recommended passing standards over three years. For 2003, the standard
was set at 2 SEM below Panel Recommendation (PR). For 2004, for grades 3 through
10, the passing standard was set at 1 SEM below PR, and 2 SEM below PR for
grade 11*. For 2005 for grades 3 through 10, the passing standard was set at
Panel Recommendation, and 1 SEM below PR for grade 11*. In general, this phase-in
meant that in 2004, students needed to correctly answer one to three fewer
questions than in 2005.
* There was a one-year delayed phase-in for grade 11, exit-level TAKS.
This was because the grade 10 tests were built to be predictors of performance
on the grade 11 tests. Therefore, the standard in place when students
took the grade 10 TAKS was extended to grade 11 so that for both years
those students were required to meet the same passing standard. Beginning
with the 2005-06 test administrations, the passing standard on the grade
11 TAKS is at Panel Recommendation.
TAKS Grade 8 Science. For the 2007 spring administration, the grade 8 science
passing standard was 1 SEM below PR. See also TAKS and Appendix F.
TAKS Passing Standard: See TAKS Panel Recommendation.
TAKS Progress Measure (AEA Campus and AEA Charter
Operator Performance only): This measure is used in determining accountability ratings under alternative
education accountability (AEA) procedures. The TAKS Progress Measure is based
on tests taken. It sums performance results across grades 3 though 12 and across
all subjects. It is calculated as follows:
number of TAKS tests that meet the standard or have a TGI ≥ 0 and
number
of TAKS exit-level retests that meet the standard
divided by number
of TAKS tests taken and
number of TAKS exit-level retests that meet the standard
This measure is only shown on the AEIS reports for campuses and charter operators
evaluated under the AEA procedures in 2007. Prior year results are provided
regardless of whether the campus or charter operator was evaluated under AEA
procedures in 2006.
-
AEA Campus. On reports for registered alternative education campuses, the value
shown for the Campus Group column is a dash (-); the value for the District
column is an asterisk (*) unless the campus is run by an AEA charter operator.
The State column shows aggregates of the AEA campuses only.
-
AEA Charter Operator. On reports for AEA charter operators, the
value shown for the State and Region columns show aggregates of the AEA
campuses only.
For more information on this measure, see Chapter 10 in the 2007 Accountability
Manual.
TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation: This indicator presents percentages
of students tested and not tested on the TAKS, TAKS-I, SDAA II, or TAKS-Alt,
as well as percentages of students included and excluded in determining accountability
ratings. For 2007, results from the TAKS and the SDAA II were used in determining
accountability ratings. The TAKS-I (known as the TAKS (Accommodated) beginning
2007-08) was not used in determining ratings for 2007, and is not reported
on the 2006-07 AEIS reports, although it is included with the regular TAKS
in the 2008 preview indicator. A new test, the TAKS-Alt, was also administered
as a field test in 2007. Performance on this test was not used in determining
accountability ratings, and is not reported on the 2006-07 AEIS reports.
Although it is the intention to include every student's test performance in
the accountability system, there are circumstances under which some students
were tested, but their performance was not reported. The reasons for exclusion
are as follows:
- Students may take the TAKS or SDAA II but be excluded from the results
reported because they were not enrolled in that district by the last Friday
in the previous October (shown as Mobile).
- Students may take only the TAKS-I or TAKS-Alt.
Other students are not tested. Reasons for not testing are as follows:
- Students may have received an ARD (Admission, Review, and Dismissal)
exemption for the TAKS, but not taken the SDAA II, TAKS-I, or TAKS-Alt.
These students must have taken a locally-determined alternate assessment
(LDAA). Participation on the LDAA is not shown on the AEIS reports.
- Students may have received a LEP (Limited English Proficient) exemption
for every test and taken only the Reading Proficiency Tests in English
(RPTE) and local tests.
- Students may have been absent during every test administration.
- Tests may not be scored due to illness during testing or other test
administration irregularities.
The percentages of students participating and not participating in testing
are based as much as possible on the total number of students enrolled at the
time of testing. Districts are required to submit a TAKS or SDAA II answer
document for every student enrolled in grades 3 through 11. Students who take
subject tests from different assessments (for example, TAKS mathematics and
SDAA II reading) will have multiple answer documents. The methodology used
to create TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt Participation eliminates, as much as
possible, duplicate counts of students resulting from multiple answer documents.
Appendix E provides a description for each component of TAKS/TAKS-I/SDAA II/TAKS-Alt
Participation. (Source: TEA Student Assessment Division)
Teachers by Ethnicity and Sex: These are counts of teacher FTEs by the major
ethnic groups and by sex. Counts are also expressed as a percent of the total
teacher FTEs. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Teachers by Highest Degree Held (District Profile only): This shows the distribution
of degrees attained by teachers in the district. The FTE counts of teachers
with no degree, bachelor's, master's, and doctorate degrees are expressed as
a percent of the total teacher FTEs. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Teachers by Program (population served): Teacher FTE counts are categorized
by the type of student populations served. Regular education, special education,
compensatory education, career and technology education, bilingual/ESL education,
gifted and talented education, and miscellaneous other populations served are
shown. Teacher FTE values are allocated across population types for teachers
who serve multiple population types. Percentages are expressed as a percent
of total teacher FTEs. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Teachers by Years of Experience (District Profile only): This is the FTE count
of teachers with years of professional experience that fall into the ranges
shown. Experience in these categories is the total years of experience for
the individual, not years of experience in the reporting district or campus.
Teacher counts within each range of experience are expressed as a percent of
total teacher FTEs. A beginning teacher is a teacher reported with zero years
of experience. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Texas Growth Index (TGI): The Texas Growth Index (TGI) is an estimate of a
student's academic growth on the TAKS tests over two consecutive years (in
consecutive grades). For the state accountability system, it is used to calculate
Comparable Improvement in reading/ELA and mathematics for Gold Performance
Acknowledgments, and to calculate the TAKS Progress Indicator under the alternative
education accountability procedures. Average TGI is also one of the measures
reported for prior year TAKS failers.
A TGI of zero means that the year-to-year change in average scale score is
equal to the average predicted changes as calculated in the 2003 to 2004 base
comparison years. A positive TGI means the group demonstrated growth that is
larger than the expected growth for that group. A negative TGI indicates the
group grew less than expected.
For a detailed explanation of how TGI is determined and used, refer to Appendix
E of the 2007 Accountability Manual.
Texas Success Initiative (TSI) - Higher Education Readiness Component: The
Texas Success Initiative (TSI) is a program designed to improve student success
in college. It requires students to be assessed in reading, writing and mathematics
skills prior to enrolling in college, and to be advised based on the results
of that assessment.
Students may be exempted from taking a test for the Texas Success Initiative
if they have a high enough score on their exit-level TAKS tests for mathematics
and English language arts, as set by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating
Board (THECB). The qualifying scores are scale scores of 2200 on their TAKS
mathematics and English language arts with a written composition score of 3
or higher on the writing component. This indicator shows the percent of students
who achieved this level or proficiency by subject (English language arts and
mathematics) for 2007 and 2006. Results on the TSI - Higher Education Readiness
Component were evaluated for GPA in the state accountability system.
This indicator is subject to accountability subset rules. For more detailed
information, see chapter 5 of the 2007 Accountability Manual. (Source: Division
of Student Assessment)
Total Expenditures by Object (2005-06) (District Profile
only): Total actual
expenditures are grouped by object of expense. Total actual expenditures for
groups of object categories are expressed as a percentage of total expenditures.
The values in the Per Student column show actual expenditure object categories
divided by the total number of 2005-06 students in membership. Note that the
number shown is not the amount actually spent on each and every student, but
rather a per-student average of the total. Object codes appear in parentheses.
-
Payroll Costs - gross salaries or wages and benefit costs for all employees
(6100);
-
Other Operating Costs - services rendered to school districts
by firms, individuals and other organizations; supplies and materials including
fuel for vehicles; other reading materials (not including the cost of state-adopted
textbooks); food service supplies; and other expenses necessary for the
operation of the school district (6200-6400).
-
Debt Service - all expenditures for debt service including the
retirement of debt and bond principal, and all interest expenses (6500);
and
-
Capital Outlay - expenditures for fixed assets, such as land,
buildings, and equipment (6600).
Note this item is reported as actual expenditures, not budgeted. Accordingly,
the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See also Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Total Operating Expenditures by Function (2005-06): Actual total operating
expenditures are grouped by function of expense. Actual operating expenditures
for groups of function categories are expressed as a percent of actual total
operating expenditures. The values in the Per Student column show actual operating
expenditures by function divided by the total number of 2005-06 students in
membership. Per student operating expenditures are shown for total operating
expenditures and for various groupings of operating categories. Note that the
number shown is not the amount actually spent on each and every student, but
rather a per-student average of the total.
When comparing averages for school-level expenditures note that the state and
district averages include all types of schools. For example, a high school's
per student expenditure may not be comparable to the state average because
the state value includes elementary and middle schools, which typically have
lower per student expenditures than high schools. Other variables that may
affect comparisons are the experience level of teachers and administrators,
the types of instructional programs offered, and the student characteristics.
Function codes appear in parentheses.
-
Instruction - all activities dealing directly with the interaction between
teachers and students, including instruction aided with computers (11); and,
expenditures to provide resources for Juvenile Justice Alternative Education
Programs (95).
-
Instructional-Related Services - expenditures for educational
resources and media, such as resource centers and libraries (12); and,
curriculum development and instructional staff development (13).
-
Instructional Leadership - managing, directing, supervising, and
providing leadership for staff who provide instructional services (21).
-
School Leadership - directing and managing a school (23).
-
Support Services - Student - guidance, counseling, and evaluation
services (31); social work services (32); and, health services (33).
-
Student Transportation (District Profile Only) - transporting
students to and from school (34).
-
Food Services - food service operation, including cost of food
and labor (35).
-
Cocurricular Activities - school-sponsored activities during or
after the school day that are not essential to the delivery of instructional
services (36).
-
Central Administration (District Profile Only) - managing or governing
the school district as an overall entity (41); costs associated with the
purchase or sale of attendance credits either from the state or from other
school district(s) (92); and for Charter Schools only, fund raising (81).
-
Plant Maintenance and Operations - keeping the physical plant
and grounds in effective working condition (51).
-
Security and Monitoring Services - keeping student and staff surroundings
safe (52).
-
Data Processing Services - data processing services, whether in-house
or contracted (53).
-
Other Campus Costs - (Campus Profile Only) combines functions
35, 36, 51, 52, 53 above.
Note this item is reported as actual expenditures, not budgeted. Accordingly,
the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See also Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Total Operating Expenditures by Program (2005-06): Actual total operating expenditures
are grouped by program of expense. Actual operating expenditures for groups
of program categories are expressed as a percent of actual total operating
expenditures. The values in the Per Student column show actual total operating
expenditures divided by the total number of 2005-06 students in membership.
Per student operating expenditures are shown for total operating expenditures
by program for various groupings of operating categories. Note that the number
shown is not the amount actually spent on each and every student; it is a per-student
average of the total. Program codes appear in parentheses. The sum of operating
expenditures by program area is less than total operating expenditures by function
because a significant portion of expenditures have no program area designated
and are reported as "99" meaning "undistributed." These
are not included in any of the program categories shown or in the total operating
expenditure amount by program. Also, functions included differ between the
two breakdowns (by program versus by function).
-
Regular - costs to provide the basic services for education/instruction to
students not in special education (11).
-
Gifted & Talented Education - the cost to assess students
for program placement and provide instructional services beyond the basic
educational program, designed to meet the needs of students in gifted and
talented programs (21).
-
Career & Technology Education - the cost to evaluate, place
and provide educational and/or other services to prepare students for gainful
employment, advanced technical training or homemaking. This may include
apprenticeship and job training activities (22).
-
Special Education - services to students with disabilities. The
costs incurred to evaluate, place and provide educational and/or other
services to students who have Individual Educational Plans (IEP) approved
by Admission, Review and Dismissal (ARD) committees. These plans are based
on students' abilities and/or learning needs (23).
-
Accelerated Education - the cost to use instructional strategies
in accordance with campus/district improvement plans to provide services
in addition to those allocated for basic services for instruction, thereby
increasing the amount and quality of instructional time for students at
risk of dropping out of school and the costs incurred to provide services
in support of Title I, Part A schoolwide campuses with at least 40% educationally
disadvantaged students. (24, 30).
-
Bilingual/ESL Education - cost to evaluate, place and provide
educational and/or other services that are intended to make the students
proficient in the English language, primary language literacy, composition
and academic language related to required courses (25).
-
Other - costs incurred to provide services to students who are
separated from the regular classroom to a nondisciplinary or disciplinary
alternative education program (26, 28, 29).
-
Athletics/Related Activities (District Profile only) - costs incurred
to provide for participation in competitive athletic activities, including
coaching costs as well as for sponsors of drill team, cheerleaders, pep
squad or other organized activity to support athletics excluding band (91).
Note this item is reported as actual operating expenditures by program, not
budgeted. Accordingly, the information is from the prior year (2005-06). See
Appendix B for details. (Source: PEIMS, March 2007)
Total Revenues by Source (2005-06) (District Profile only): Actual total revenues
are grouped by revenue source. Actual revenues for groups of object categories
are expressed as a percent of total revenue. The values in the Per Student
column show actual total revenues divided by the total number of students in
membership during the 2005-06 school year. Per-student revenues are shown for
total revenues by source for various groupings of revenue categories. Note
that the number shown is not the amount actually received for each and every
student, but rather a per-student average of the total.
The amounts appearing as revenue in any of the categories shown are the amounts
that were reported by districts for the general fund and all funds. Object
codes appear in parentheses.
-
Local Tax - district income from local real and personal property
taxes (objects 5710-5719, less functions 91 & 96 expenditures);
-
Other Local and Intermediate - revenue for services to other districts,
tuition and fees from students, transfers from within the state, revenue
from cocurricular and enterprising activities, revenues from intermediate
sources (county), and all other local sources (objects 5720-5769);
-
State - per capita and foundation program entitlements, revenue
from other state-funded programs, and revenue from other state agencies.
State revenue also includes Teacher Retirement System benefits paid by
the State of Texas on behalf of employees in the district (object 5800
series); and
-
Federal - revenue received by the district directly from the federal
government or distributed by the TEA or other state entities for programs
such as career and technology education, programs for educationally disadvantaged
children (Education Consolidation and Improvement Act, and Elementary and Secondary
Education Act), food service programs, and other federal programs
(object 5900 series).
Note this item is reported as actual revenues, not budgeted. Accordingly, the
information is from the prior year (2005-06). See also Appendix B. (Source:
PEIMS, March 2007)
Total Staff: Total staff includes professional staff (teachers, professional
support, administrators), educational aides, and (on the district profile)
auxiliary staff. Minority staff is the sum of the FTE counts for all non-white
staff groups (African American, Hispanic, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Native
American). This FTE count is expressed as a percent of the total staff FTE. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Total Students: This is the total number of public school students who were
reported in membership on October 27, 2006 at any grade, from early childhood
education through grade 12. Membership is a slightly different number from
enrollment, because it does not include those students who are served in the
district for less than two hours per day. For example, the count of Total
Students excludes students who attend a nonpublic school but receive some services,
such as speech therapy—for less than two hours per day—from their local public
school district. (Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006)
Turnover Rate for Teachers (District Profile only): This percent
shows the total FTE count of teachers from the fall of 2005-06 who were subsequently
not employed in the district in the fall of 2006-07, divided by the total teacher
FTE count for the fall of 2005-06. Social security numbers for teachers employed
in the district in the fall of 2005-06 were checked to verify their employment
status in the same district in the fall of 2006-07. Staff who remained employed
in the district but not as teachers were also counted toward teacher turnover.
(Source: PEIMS, Oct. 2006, Oct. 2005)
Value by Category:
See Standardized Local Tax Base (comptroller valuation).
Who
to Call
Information about the calculation of all Academic Excellence Indicator
System (AEIS) data elements is provided in this Glossary. Information
on the calculation of state accountability ratings is available
in the 2007
Accountability Manual. If, after reading these
documents, you have questions about the calculation of AEIS indicators
or accountability ratings, contact Performance Reporting
at (512) 463-9704.
Questions related to programs and policies for the following subjects
should be directed to the contacts listed below. All telephone
numbers are in the (512) area code.
Subject |
Contact |
Number |
Accountability
Ratings (methodology) |
Performance Reporting |
463-9704 |
Adequate Yearly
Progress (AYP) |
Performance Reporting |
463-9704 |
Advanced Courses |
Curriculum |
463-9581 |
Advanced Placement
(AP) Programs |
Curriculum |
463-9581 |
Charter Schools |
Charter Schools |
463-9575 |
College Admissions
Tests: |
|
|
SAT |
College Board, Southwestern Regional Office |
891-8400 |
ACT |
ACT Regional Office |
345-1949 |
Copies of
AEIS reports |
http://www.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport |
|
DAEP (Disciplinary
Alternative Education Program) |
Chapter 37, TEC – Safe Schools |
463-9982 |
Distinguished
Achievement Program |
Curriculum |
463-9581 |
Dropouts and
Completers |
Accountability Research |
475-3523 |
Gold Performance
Acknowledgment |
Performance Reporting |
463-9704 |
General Inquiry |
School Governance and General Inquiries |
475-3697 |
JJAEP (Juvenile
Justice Alternative Education Program) |
Chapter 37, TEC – Safe Schools |
463-9982 |
Limited English
Proficient Students |
|
|
Testing
Issues |
Student Assessment |
463-9536 |
Other
Issues |
Curriculum (Bilingual Education Program
Unit) |
475-9581 |
No Child Left
Behind Act |
NCLB Program Coordination |
463-9374 |
PBM Special
Education Monitoring Results Status |
Program Monitoring and Interventions |
463-9414 |
PEIMS |
PEIMS HelpLine |
936-7346 |
Public Hearings |
Interventions and Special Investigations |
463-9290 |
Recommended
High School Program |
Curriculum |
463-9581 |
Retention
Policy |
Curriculum |
463-9581 |
School Finance |
School Financial Audits |
463-9095 |
School Report
Card |
Performance Reporting |
463-9704 |
SDAA II |
Student Assessment |
463-9536 |
Special Education |
|
|
Testing
Issues |
Student Assessment |
463-9536 |
Other
Issues |
Special Education |
463-9414 |
Statutory
(Legal) Issues |
Legal Services |
463-9720 |
TAKS |
Student Assessment |
463-9536 |
TAKS-Inclusive |
Student Assessment |
463-9536 |
TAKS Testing
Contractor |
Pearson Educational Measurement |
(800) 252-9186 |
TAT (Technical
Assistance Team) |
|
|
Methodology
for List |
Performance Reporting |
463-9704 |
Implementation
of Team |
Program Monitoring and Interventions |
463-9414 |
Texas Success
Initiative (TSI) |
Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board |
427-6100 |
Appendix
A
PEIMS Role Identifications
(In Alphabetical Order by Label)
| Central Administrators |
| 027 |
Superintendent/CAO/CEO/President |
| Campus Administrators |
| 003 |
Assistant Principal |
| Either Central Or Campus Administrators* |
| 004 |
Assistant/Associate/Deputy Superintendent |
| 012 |
Instructional Officer |
| 020 |
Principal |
| 028 |
Teacher Supervisor |
| 040 |
Athletic Director |
| 043 |
Business Manager |
| 044 |
Tax Assessor and/or Collector |
| 045 |
Director - Personnel/Human Resources |
| 055 |
Registrar |
| 061 |
Asst/Assoc/Deputy Exec Director |
| 062 |
Component/Department Director |
| 063 |
Coordinator/Manager/Supervisor |
| Professional Support Staff |
| 002 |
Art Therapist |
| 005 |
Psychological Associate |
| 006 |
Audiologist |
| 007 |
Corrective Therapist |
| 008 |
Counselor |
| 011 |
Educational Diagnostician |
| 013 |
Librarian |
| 015 |
Music Therapist |
| 016 |
Occupational Therapist |
| 017 |
Certified Orientation & Mobility Specialist |
| 018 |
Physical Therapist |
| 019 |
Physician |
| 021 |
Recreational Therapist |
| 022 |
School Nurse |
| 023 |
LSSP/Psychologist |
| 024 |
Social Worker |
| 026 |
Speech Therapist/Speech-Lang Pathologist |
| 030 |
Visiting Teacher |
| 032 |
Work-Based Learning Site Coordinator |
| 041 |
Teacher Facilitator |
| 042 |
Teacher Appraiser |
| 054 |
Department Head |
| 056 |
Athletic Trainer |
| 058 |
Other Campus Professional Personnel |
| 064 |
Specialist/Consultant |
| 065 |
Field Service Agent |
| 079 |
Other ESC Professional Personnel |
| 080 |
Other Non-Campus Professional Personnel |
| Teachers |
| 025 |
Special Duty Teacher |
| 029 |
Teacher |
| 047 |
Substitute Teacher |
| Educational Aides |
| 033 |
Educational Aide |
| 036 |
Certified Interpreter |
| 037 |
Non-Certified Interpreter |
| Auxiliary Staff |
| Employment
record, but no responsibility records. |
* Administrators
reported with these roles are categorized as central office or
campus, depending on the organization ID reported for them.
Appendix
B
Financial Accounting Codes for Revenue
and Expenditure Items
(In Alphabetical Order by Label)
Label |
Funds* |
Function(s) |
Object(s) +++ |
Program(s) |
Actual Expenditure
Information |
BY
FUNCTION |
Community
Services |
General and All |
61 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Total
Operating Expenditures |
General and All |
Sum of Detail Below |
6100–6400 |
All |
Instruction** |
General and All |
11,95 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Instructional–Related
Services** |
General and All |
12,13 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Instructional Leadership** |
General and All |
21 |
6100–6400 |
All |
School Leadership** |
General and All |
23 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Support Services – Student** |
General and All |
31,32,33 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Student Transportation |
General and All |
34 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Food Services |
General and All |
35 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Cocurricular Activities |
General and All |
36 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Central Administration |
General and All |
41,92 (or 81/Chrtr Schools) |
6100–6400 |
All |
Plant Maintenance & Operations |
General and All |
51 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Security and Monitoring Services |
General and All |
52 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Data Processing Services |
General and All |
53 |
6100–6400 |
All |
Other Campus Costs*** |
General and All |
35,36,51–53 |
6100–6400 |
All |
BY
OBJECT |
Total
Expenditures |
General and All |
All§ |
All 6000s |
All |
Payroll Costs |
General and All |
All§ |
6100 |
All |
Other Operating Costs |
General and All |
All§ |
6200–6400 |
All |
Debt Service |
General and All |
All§ |
6500 |
All |
Capital Outlay |
General and All |
All§ |
6600 |
All |
Actual Program
Expenditure Information |
| BY
PROGRAM |
Total
Operating Expenditures |
General and All |
Sum of Detail Below |
6100–6400 |
Sum of Detail Below |
Regular Education |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91,
92,95,96+,99 **** |
6100–6400 |
11 |
Special Education |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
23 |
Accelerated Education |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
24, 30 |
Career & Technology Education |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
22 |
Bilingual/ESL Education |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
25 |
Gifted & Talented Education |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
21 |
Athletics/Related Activities§§ |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
91 |
Other |
General and All |
11–13,21,23,31–36,51,52, 91+, 92,95,96+,99
**** |
6100–6400 |
26, 28, 29 |
Actual Revenue Information |
BY
SOURCE |
Total Revenues |
General and All |
n/a |
5000s |
n/a |
Local Tax |
General and All |
n/a |
5710–5719 (less function 91& 96 expenditures) |
n/a |
Other Local & Intermediate |
General and All |
n/a |
5720–5769 |
n/a |
State |
General and All |
n/a |
5800 |
n/a |
Federal |
General and All |
n/a |
5900 |
n/a |
Equity Transfers |
General and All |
91,96 |
All 6000s |
All |
* Funds – The
general fund includes fund codes 101 – 199.
Fund code 420 is also included in the general fund for charter
schools only. All funds include the general fund plus fund codes
200/300/400 series, 599, 601, 699, and 701.
** Indicates the line
item appears on the Campus Profile as well as District Profile.
All line items not marked appear only on the District Profile.
*** Indicates the line
item appears on the Campus Profile only.
**** At
the campus level, only functions 11-13, 21, 23, 31 – 33,
and 95 are included in expenditures by program area.
§ Excludes
Intergovernmental Charges (function 90 series) except functions 92 & 95.
§§ Athletics/Related
Activities is not included at the campus level.
+ Functions
91 and 96 represent tuition transfers for grades not offered,
not “Equity
Transfers.”
++ Functions 91 and 96 represent
the expenditure amount reported for the cost of reducing property
wealth to the required equalized wealth level and payments to
charter schools, respectively.
+++ The 6400 object codes include: 6629, 6631, 6639, 6649, and
6659 which is only applicable to charter schools excluding open
enrollment college and university charters. Note that these object
codes are not included in the 6600 code series.
Appendix C
Advanced Academic Courses
2006-07 Academic Excellence
Indicator System
English Language Arts
A3220100 |
English Language and Composition |
A3220200 |
English Literature and Composition |
A3220300 |
International English Language |
I3220300 |
English III |
I3220400 |
English IV |
03221100 |
Research/Technical Writing |
03221200 |
Creative/Imaginative Writing |
03221500 |
Literary Genres |
03221600 |
Humanities |
03221800 |
Independent Study in English |
03231000 |
Independent Study in Journalism |
03231902 |
Advanced Broadcast Journalism III |
03240400 |
Oral Interpretation III |
03240800 |
Debate III |
03241100 |
Public Speaking III |
03241200 |
Independent Study in Speech |
Mathematics
A3100101 |
Calculus AB |
A3100102 |
Calculus BC |
A3100200 |
AP Statistics |
I3100100 |
Mathematical Methods Subsidiary Level |
I3100200 |
Mathematical Studies Subsidiary Level |
I3100300 |
Mathematics Higher Level |
I3100400 |
Advanced Mathematics Subsidiary Level |
03101100 |
Pre-Calculus |
03102500 |
Independent Study in Mathematics (1st time) |
03102501 |
Independent Study in Mathematics (2nd time) |
Computer Science
A3580100 |
Computer Science I |
A3580200 |
Computer Science II |
I3580200 |
Computer Science I |
I3580300 |
Computer Science II |
I3580400 |
Informational Technology in a Global Society |
03580200 |
Computer Science I |
03580300 |
Computer Science II |
Science
A3010200 |
Biology |
A3020000 |
Environmental Science |
A3040000 |
Chemistry |
A3050001 |
Physics B |
A3050002 |
Physics C |
I3010200 |
Biology |
I3010201 |
Biology II |
I3020000 |
Environmental Systems |
I3040001 |
Chemistry I |
I3040002 |
Chemistry II |
I3050001 |
Physics I |
I3050002 |
Physics II |
Social Studies/History
A3310100 |
Microeconomics |
A3310200 |
Macroeconomics |
A3330100 |
United States Government and Politics |
A3330200 |
Comparative Government and Politics |
A3340100 |
United States History |
A3340200 |
European History |
A3350100 |
Psychology |
A3360100 |
Human Geography |
A3370100 |
World History |
I3301100 |
History, Standard Level |
I3301200 |
History: Africa, Higher Level |
I3301300 |
History: Americas, Higher Level |
I3301400 |
History: East and Southeast Asia, Higher Level |
I3301500 |
History: Europe, Higher Level |
I3302100 |
Geography, Standard Level |
I3302200 |
Geography, Higher Level |
I3303100 |
Economics, Standard Level |
I3303200 |
Economics, Higher Level |
I3303300 |
Business and Management I (IBBMT1) |
I3303400 |
Business and Management II (IBBMT2) |
I3304100 |
Psychology, Standard Level |
I3304200 |
Psychology, Higher Level |
I3366010 |
Philosophy |
I3000100 |
Theory of Knowledge |
03310301 |
Economics Advanced Studies |
03380001 |
Social Studies Advanced Studies |
Fine Arts
A3150200 |
Music Theory |
A3500100 |
History Of Art |
A3500300 |
Art/Drawing |
A3500400 |
Art/Two-Dimensional Design Portfolio |
A3500500 |
Art/Three-Dimensional Design Portfolio |
I3250200 |
Music SL |
I3250300 |
Music HL |
I3600100 |
Art/Design HL |
I3600200 |
Art/Design SL-A |
I3600300 |
Art/Design SL-B |
I3750200 |
Theatre Arts SL |
I3750300 |
Theatre Arts HL |
03150400 |
Music IV Band |
03150800 |
Music IV Orchestra |
03151200 |
Music IV Choir |
03151600 |
Music IV Jazz Band |
03152000 |
Music IV Instrumental Ensemble |
03152400 |
Music IV Vocal Ensemble |
03250400 |
Theatre Arts IV |
03251000 |
Theatre Production IV |
03251200 |
Technical Theatre IV |
03502300 |
Art IV Drawing |
03502400 |
Art IV Painting |
03502500 |
Art IV Printmaking |
03502600 |
Art IV Fibers |
03502700 |
Art IV Ceramics |
03502800 |
Art IV Sculpture |
03502900 |
Art IV Jewelry |
03503100 |
Art IV Photography |
03503200 |
Art IV Graphic Design |
03503500 |
Art IV Electronic Media |
03830400 |
Dance IV |
Advanced Languages (Modern or Classical)
A3410100 |
French IV Language |
A3410200 |
French V Literature |
A3420100 |
German IV Language |
A3430100 |
Latin IV (Vergil) |
A3430200 |
Latin V (Latin Literature) |
A3440100 |
Spanish IV Language |
A3440200 |
Spanish V Literature |
I3120400 |
Japanese IV |
I3120500 |
Japanese V |
I3410400 |
French IV |
I3410500 |
French V |
I3420400 |
German IV |
I3420500 |
German V |
I3430400 |
Latin IV |
I3430500 |
Latin V |
I3440400 |
Spanish IV |
I3440500 |
Spanish V |
I3450400 |
Russian IV |
I3450500 |
Russian V |
I3480400 |
Hebrew IV |
I3480500 |
Hebrew V |
I3490400 |
Chinese IV |
I3490500 |
Chinese V |
I3996000 |
Other Foreign Language IV |
I3996100 |
Other Foreign Language V |
03110400 |
Arabic IV |
03110500 |
Arabic V |
03110600 |
Arabic VI |
03110700 |
Arabic VII |
03120400 |
Japanese IV |
03120500 |
Japanese V |
03120600 |
Japanese VI |
03120700 |
Japanese VII |
03400400 |
Italian IV |
03400500 |
Italian V |
03400600 |
Italian VI |
03400700 |
Italian VII |
03410400 |
French IV |
03410500 |
French V |
03410600 |
French VI |
03410700 |
French VII |
03420400 |
German IV |
03420500 |
German V |
03420600 |
German VI |
03420700 |
German VII |
03430400 |
Latin IV |
03430500 |
Latin V |
03430600 |
Latin VI |
03430700 |
Latin VII |
03440400 |
Spanish IV |
03440500 |
Spanish V |
03440600 |
Spanish VI |
03440700 |
Spanish VII |
03450400 |
Russian IV |
03450500 |
Russian V |
03450600 |
Russian VI |
03450700 |
Russian VII |
03460400 |
Czech IV |
03460500 |
Czech V |
03460600 |
Czech VI |
03460700 |
Czech VII |
03470400 |
Portuguese IV |
03470500 |
Portuguese V |
03470600 |
Portuguese VI |
03470700 |
Portuguese VII |
03480400 |
Hebrew IV |
03480500 |
Hebrew V |
03480600 |
Hebrew VI |
03480700 |
Hebrew VII |
03490400 |
Chinese IV |
03490500 |
Chinese V |
03490600 |
Chinese VI |
03490700 |
Chinese VII |
03980400 |
American Sign Language IV |
03980500 |
American Sign Language V |
03980600 |
American Sign Language VI |
03980700 |
American Sign Language VII |
03996000 |
Other Foreign Language IV |
03996100 |
Other Foreign Language V |
03996200 |
Other Foreign Language VI |
03996300 |
Other Foreign Language VII |
- All courses shown were for the 2005-06 school year.
- An “A” prefix indicates a College Board Advanced
Placement course.
- An “I” prefix indicates an International Baccalaureate
course.
- Dual Enrollment courses are not specifically shown on this
list.
Appendix
D
Appendix
E
Appendix F
TAKS Raw Scores for Spring 2007 Tests
Spring 2007 TAKS Reading (English)
Performance Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
31 |
Panel Recommendation |
36 |
23 |
64% |
| Commended Performance |
34 |
94% |
| Grade
4 |
Panel Recommendation |
40 |
27 |
68% |
| Commended Performance |
37 |
93% |
| Grade
51 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
29 |
69% |
| Commended Performance |
39 |
93% |
| Grade
6 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
27 |
64% |
| Commended Performance |
37 |
88% |
| Grade
7 |
Panel Recommendation |
48 |
32 |
67% |
| Commended Performance |
44 |
92% |
| Grade
8 |
Panel Recommendation |
48 |
33 |
69% |
| Commended Performance |
44 |
92% |
| Grade
9 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
28 |
67% |
| Commended Performance |
36 |
86% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Reading (Spanish)
Performance Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
31 |
Panel Recommendation |
36 |
23 |
64% |
| Commended Performance |
33 |
92% |
| Grade
4 |
Panel Recommendation |
40 |
25 |
63% |
| Commended Performance |
36 |
90% |
| Grade
51 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
27 |
64% |
| Commended Performance |
37 |
88% |
| Grade
6 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
25 |
60% |
| Commended Performance |
36 |
86% |
Spring 2007 TAKS English Language Arts
Performance Standards2
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
10 |
Panel Recommendation |
73 |
44 |
60% |
| Commended Performance |
64 |
88% |
| Grade
11 |
Panel Recommendation |
73 |
42 |
58% |
| |
Commended Performance |
62 |
85% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Mathematics (English)
Performance Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
3 |
Panel Recommendation |
40 |
27 |
68% |
| Commended Performance |
37 |
93% |
| Grade
4 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
28 |
67% |
| Commended Performance |
39 |
93% |
| Grade
51 |
Panel Recommendation |
44 |
30 |
68% |
| Commended Performance |
40 |
91% |
| Grade
6 |
Panel Recommendation |
46 |
29 |
63% |
| Commended Performance |
41 |
89% |
| Grade
7 |
Panel Recommendation |
48 |
28 |
58% |
| Commended Performance |
44 |
92% |
| Grade
8 |
Panel Recommendation |
50 |
30 |
60% |
| Commended Performance |
45 |
90% |
| Grade
9 |
Panel Recommendation |
52 |
31 |
60% |
| Commended Performance |
45 |
87% |
| Grade
10 |
Panel Recommendation |
56 |
32 |
57% |
| Commended Performance |
50 |
89% |
| Grade
11 |
Panel Recommendation |
60 |
33 |
55% |
| Commended Performance |
53 |
88% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Mathematics (Spanish)
Performance Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
3 |
Panel Recommendation |
40 |
27 |
68% |
| Commended Performance |
37 |
93% |
| Grade
4 |
Panel Recommendation |
42 |
28 |
67% |
| Commended Performance |
37 |
88% |
| Grade
51 |
Panel Recommendation |
44 |
29 |
66% |
| Commended Performance |
39 |
89% |
| Grade
6 |
Panel Recommendation |
46 |
29 |
63% |
| Commended Performance |
40 |
87% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Writing (Spanish)
Performance Standards3
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
4 |
Panel Recommendation |
32 |
18 |
56% |
| Commended Performance |
27 |
84% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Writing (English)
Performance Standards3
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
4 |
Panel Recommendation |
32 |
20 |
63% |
| |
Commended Performance |
29 |
91% |
| Grade
7 |
Panel Recommendation |
44 |
26 |
59% |
| |
Commended Performance |
39 |
89% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Social Studies Performance
Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
8 |
Panel Recommendation |
48 |
25 |
52% |
| |
Commended Performance |
42 |
88% |
| Grade
10 |
Panel Recommendation |
50 |
29 |
58% |
| |
Commended Performance |
45 |
90% |
| Grade
11 |
Panel Recommendation |
55 |
28 |
51% |
| |
Commended Performance |
49 |
89% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Science (English)
Performance Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
5 |
Panel Recommendation |
40 |
30 |
75% |
| |
Commended Performance |
37 |
93% |
| Grade
8 |
Panel Recommendation |
50 |
32 |
64% |
|
|
One SEM Below (2007
Standard) |
29 |
58% |
43 |
86% |
| |
Commended Performance |
.
| Grade
10 |
Panel Recommendation |
55 |
35 |
64% |
| |
Commended Performance |
50 |
91% |
| Grade
11 |
Panel Recommendation |
55 |
29 |
53% |
| |
Commended Performance |
49 |
89% |
Spring 2007 TAKS Science (Spanish)
Performance Standards
| |
Standard |
Total
Points Possible |
Number
Correct |
Percent
Correct |
| Grade
5 |
Panel Recommendation |
40 |
31 |
78% |
| |
Commended Performance |
37 |
93% |
-
February 2007 (first administration) Grades 3 and 5
Reading TAKS standards, and April (first administration)
Grade 5 Mathematics TAKS standards.
-
An essay rating of 2 or higher is required for Met
Standard on the English Language Arts tests.
-
An essay rating of 2 or higher is required for Met
Standard and an essay rating of 3 or higher is required
for Commended Performance on the grades 4 and
7 writing tests.
Appendix G
PBM Special Education Monitoring Results Status
The system of special education program monitoring
is aligned with other Performance-Based Monitoring (PBM) activities
through the use of graduated interventions based on indicators
of district and charter performance and program effectiveness.
These indicators are part of the Performance-Based Monitoring
Analysis System (PBMAS). The individual PBMAS indicators related
to special education address student participation in, and performance
on, assessment instruments; graduation and dropout rates; over-identification
of students for the special education program; disproportionate
representation based on race, ethnicity, or limited English proficiency;
ARD committee exemptions from TAKS and SDAA II; and disciplinary
actions. District and charter special education data are reviewed
regularly as are complaints filed with TEA about special education
services. For further information or questions about this status,
please contact the Program Monitoring and Interventions Division
at (512) 463-9414. The “as of date” for the statuses
reported in the 2006-07 AEIS report is September 28, 2007.
The definitions of each program status category are:
- Local Interventions Implemented. The Local Education
Agency (LEA) completed a local review process by a specified
date as required in Stage 1A Intervention and retained materials
and templates at the LEA.
- Completed: Routine Follow-up. The LEA data and documentation
met TEA requirements for completion of process. TEA will monitor
implementation of the Continuous Improvement Plan (CIP).
- Completed: Noncompliance Follow-up. The LEA data
and documentation met TEA requirements for completion of process.
TEA will monitor implementation of the CIP and systemic correction
of areas of noncompliance identified by the review.
- Pending CIP Resubmission. TEA review determined that
one or more areas of the CIP did not meet minimum TEA requirements
and revision was necessary.
- Pending TEA On-Site Action. TEA review determined
that: appropriate implementation of TEA monitoring processes,
including submission of accurate data, appropriate implementation
of intervention requirements, and/or appropriate implementation
of the CIP could not be verified through LEA documentation;
imminent program performance and/or effectiveness concerns
exist; and/or ongoing noncompliance for more than one year
is identified, resulting in an on-site review to determine
additional TEA intervention.
- TEA On-Site Action Completed: Routine Follow-up. TEA
has completed an on-site review of the LEA program. As a result,
the LEA has implemented and/or revised a CIP. TEA will monitor
implementation of the CIP.
- TEA On-Site Action Completed: Noncompliance Follow-Up. TEA
has completed an on-site review of the LEA program. As a result,
the LEA has implemented and/or revised a CIP that includes
actions to address noncompliance with program requirements.
TEA will monitor implementation of the CIP and systemic correction
of areas of noncompliance identified by the review.
- TEA On-Site
Action Completed: Oversight/Sanction/Intervention. TEA
has completed an on-site review of the LEA program. As a result,
ongoing noncompliance for longer than one year was identified/confirmed;
appropriate implementation of the TEA monitoring process, including
submission of accurate data and appropriate implementation
of intervention requirements, could not be verified; and/or
CIP implementation was not proceeding as appropriate for the
LEA. TEA
oversight, sanctions, and interventions were implemented as
a result.
- Pending Random Data Verification. Regardless of
whether a stage of intervention initially was assigned, an
LEA may be subject to random selection for data review to ensure
the integrity of monitoring system data and appropriate implementation
of the program.
- Pending Random Process Verification. Regardless
of review results or stage of intervention, an LEA may be subject
to random selection for process review to ensure the integrity
of the implementation of the monitoring system, including data
reporting and accuracy of findings.
- Oversight/Sanction/Intervention. TEA
oversight, sanctions, and interventions were implemented under
the following circumstances: (a) the second CIP submission
of an LEA at Stage 1, Stage 2, or Stage 3 Intervention was
not adequate; (b) the CIP of an LEA at the Stage 4 Intervention
level was not adequately developed after an on-site review;
(c) ongoing noncompliance for longer than one year was identified;
(d) CIP implementation was not proceeding as appropriate for
any LEA; or (e) TEA could not verify appropriate implementation
of TEA monitoring processes, including submission of accurate
data, appropriate implementation of intervention requirements,
and/or appropriate implementation of a CIP.
- On-Site Intervention Assigned. TEA has assigned
a technical assistance team, special purpose monitor, conservator,
or management team to oversee correction of noncompliance and/or
implementation of program and monitoring requirements.
- Proposed
Charter Non-Renewal. The charter school
has been notified of TEA’s intent not to renew the charter.
- Campus
Closure. The campus was closed as a result
of TEA sanctions.
- In Review. TEA had not completed initial
review of the information submitted by the LEA.
- No status is
shown for LEAs not selected for intervention in PBM for Special
Education
Appendix H
Detailed Summary of English Language Learners Progress Measure
Accountability Component |
Assessment |
ELL Measure Reported in the 2006-07 AEIS Reports |
Grades Evaluated |
TAKS |
Grades 3 - 11 |
RPTE
(First-Time and Previous Testers) |
Grades 3 - 11 |
Proficiency Criteria for LEP Students Tested on Both TAKS and RPTE |
TAKS and RPTE
(First-Time and Previous
Testers) |
1) Met Standard on the TAKS English Reading/ELA test, or
2) meeting the student proficiency level on the RPTE based on years in U.S. schools for first-time RPTE testers, or
3) showing progress on the RPTE from the prior year for previous testers. |
Proficiency Criteria for LEP Students Tested on Only TAKS or RPTE |
TAKS and RPTE
(First-Time and Previous
Testers) |
LEP students for whom only a TAKS answer document is available must meet the TAKS performance standard. LEP students for whom only an RPTE answer document is available must meet the proficiency level or show progress based on years in U.S. schools. |
Student Success Initiative (SSI) Administrations Evaluated |
TAKS |
Results from the first and second administrations of the TAKS grade 3 and grade 5 reading tests are incorporated. |
Special Education Student Performance |
TAKS and RPTE
(First-Time and Previous Testers) |
Performance of special education students who take the RPTE (for LEP students) or TAKS (for LEP and monitored LEP students) is included in the indicator. |
Accountability Subset |
TAKS and RPTE
(First-Time and Previous
Testers) |
The district indicator includes test results for students who were enrolled in the district on the Public Education Information Management System (PEIMS) fall enrollment snapshot date. The campus indicator includes students who were enrolled on the campus on the PEIMS fall enrollment snapshot date. |
LEP students
1st year in U.S. schools |
TAKS |
Not Evaluated |
RPTE
(First-Time Testers) |
Not Evaluated |
RPTE
(Previous Testers) |
Not Evaluated |
LEP students
2nd year in U.S. schools |
TAKS |
Met Standard on TAKS English Reading/ ELA test. |
RPTE
(First-Time Testers) |
First-time RPTE testers must score Intermediate or higher. |
RPTE
(Previous Testers) |
Previous RPTE testers must score at least one level higher than the previous year or score Advanced or higher. |
LEP students
3rd year in U.S. schools |
TAKS |
Met Standard on the TAKS English Reading/ ELA test. |
RPTE
(First-Time Testers) |
First-time RPTE testers must score Advanced or higher. |
RPTE
(Previous Testers) |
Previous RPTE testers must score Advanced or higher. |
LEP students
4 or more years in U.S. schools |
TAKS |
Met Standard on the TAKS English Reading/ ELA test. |
RPTE
(First-Time Testers) |
First-time RPTE testers must score Advanced High. |
RPTE
(Previous Testers) |
Previous RPTE testers must score Advanced High. |
Monitored LEP students first or second year after exit from LEP status |
TAKS |
Met Standard on the TAKS English Reading/ ELA test. |
RPTE
(First-Time Testers) |
N/A |
RPTE
(Previous Testers) |
N/A |
Performance Reporting
|