quote:
Right, they are not a lost cause but they are a difficult cause. That is why I sent my children to BISD. I wanted them to understand the real world they will have to live in and learn they are no better than the under privileged children. A child from a poor family with one parent missing and the other parent just trying to survive has a difficult time performing very well in school. They are not a lost cause but do present a much more difficult problem than children from homes with two high achiever parents. BISD has a ton of these children from tough situations. The teachers and administrators are great but there is only so much they can do. If you switched the two student populations BISD would have great numbers.
They may be a difficult cause, but that doesn't mean that you could take the students, drop them anywhere, and that school district would suddenly perform like Bryan ISD.
For example, there are Fiscal Peers to Bryan ISD that perform much better academically:
Sharyland ISD, Hidalgo County: 97th percentile
Los Fresnos CISD, Cameron County: 95th percentile
Canutillo ISD, El Paso County: 82nd percentile
Lufkin ISD, Angelina County: 81st percentile
Plugerville ISD, Travis County: 79th percentile
...
And many more before you get to Bryan at the 16th percentile.
A Fiscal Peer is defined as: A cost comparison group consisting of up to 40 districts (or campuses) most fiscally similar to each district (or campus). Cost factors to determine fiscal peers include size, location, cost-adjusted wages and student characteristics. Each district (or campus) can have a unique fiscal peer group, though due to similarities, many groups overlap.
So rather than just saying the kids are stuck at the 16th percentile, perhaps we should look to the above districts and see what they are doing to get those kids to perform at a higher academic level.