Kamis, 10 Februari 2011

Morris School District sees Sat Scores Rise End Report Card NJ - Patch

About 97 percent of students, the Morris School District High School was published in 2010 by force, according to latest statistics from the State of New Jersey ballot Tuesday.

This is one percentage point higher than the class of 2009, which recorded a rate of 96.3 percent graduation. The state average for 2009-10 was 94.7 percent, again an upward trend of the previous average of 93.3 percent.

The completion rate was not the only figure that has increased in the 2009/10 school year. The participation rate has increased in percentage points higher 1:10, from 94.9 percent to 95 percent.

The average score in mathematics Sat also increased, while verbal scores and the test has slightly decreased 2008-09 to 2009-10, but remained about 30 points higher than the national average. Advanced Placement Language Arts Literacy was almost the same as in 2008-09, down from 24.9 percent to 24.2 percent, while math dropped a few percentage points from 34.5 percent to 31.8 percent but still above the national average in 2009 to 10 in math from 18.7 percent for the skills and language arts 24.3 percent.

In college, students of eighth saw a slight increase in wholesale NJASK scores for Advanced Placement in Language Arts Literacy. From 2008-09 to 2009-10 percentage rose from 12.8 to 29.9, while the partial knowledge (or failing) scores fell from 12.5 to 9.6 over the same period.

While the eighth students saw great profits and saw large drops sixth graders. NJASK6 in language arts literacy, it grew with partial knowledge from 18.1 to 28.9 per cent. In mathematics, the number rose from 17.5 to 22.7 per cent.

Also climbing, the average cost for each student in the Morris School District to educate. Already several thousand dollars higher than the national average in 2008-09 ($ 18,544 in the Morris School District for $ 15,221 against the state), 2009/10 has seen the evidence of the average cost per pupil increase in MSD $ 19,439 , exceeding a state average gain of $ 15,538 per student.

In high school, the number of students' limited English proficiency "ordered increased sharply by 10.2 per cent in 2008/09 to 17 per cent in 2009-10. Patch report on the 2008-09 financial year figures were published before the current figures. At that time, the school district administrative assistant Mary Donahoe Morris said the district's population LEP was small enough that the performance of only a few students can throw decreases significantly as a percentage. That 10.2 percent of students who fell LEP in 2008-09? Only five students in a group of 49. LEP students represent only 3.1 percent of students at Morristown High School, after 2009/10 figures.

Ago, said Morris School District Board of Education President Lisa Pollack five dropouts was still five too many.

"Our goal is always equal opportunities in education for all students," she said. "We go to different students in this area. It forces us to reach a very broad spectrum. This is our commitment."

For the complete 2009-10 NJ State Bulletin Morris School District, visit the State Department of Education Web site.

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