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08-16-06 State: six local schools perfect

By Janie Southard
jsouthard@dailystandard.com

  Seven of the nine local school districts scored the top rating possible on the state's 2005-06 report cards, which were released Tuesday by the Ohio Department of Education.



  Six local districts tallied perfect scores

  Those districts reaching a perfect 25 were Coldwater, Marion Local, St. Henry, Fort Recovery, Minster and New Bremen districts. St. Marys also scored an excellent rating with 24 indicators, only one point off a perfect score.

  Celina district with 22 indicators, and Parkway district with 15 were both ranked effective.

  Celina Superintendent Matt Miller said this morning he and his staff have known math scores in certain grades need improvement. "We have adopted a new math series that will be implemented at the start of this new school year," Miller said.  "I believe we will continue to improve and work on areas that need work until we get the excellent ranking," he said.

  Although Parkway's actual score fell within the continuous improvement rank, the district's performance index pulled it up to an effective rating.  

  According to state literature, the performance index measures the achievement of every tested student, not just those who score proficient or higher.

  All achievement tests have five performance levels: advanced, accelerated, proficient, basic and limited. Each level is assigned a point value -- advanced is high with 1.2 points and limited carries 0.3 points.  

  At Tuesday night's board of education meeting, Parkway Superintendent Doug Karst said he was disappointed the math and science scores were slightly below state average.

  "We are designated an effective school but we continue to be at risk," he said.

  The district will hold a two-day in-service before school begins next week for teachers to work on solutions to the problem areas.

  In Auglaize County, the St. Marys district is a success story as it makes its first appearance in the excellent category and also meeting AYP standards. Superintendent Ken Baker credits the district's team effort. "It's our entire staff, not only teachers but bus drivers, secretaries, custodians. Everybody here (contributes to) a successful district."

  Baker continued: "All our local districts are hardworking when it comes to school improvement. It's not a straight line. Some years show marked improvement and some years it's slower. Our goal is to show continuous improvement over a five-year period."

  Over the past four years, local superintendents have pointed out that comparing local districts to each other is an apples and oranges proposition. The state has established comparison groups "tailored" to each district and has developed a set of about 20 "peer" districts.

  Some tailoring factors include district size, poverty level, income level, rural or urban, etc.

  Over the past six years, Ohio students' test averages have increased from 73.7 to 92.9. This year more than 96 percent of Ohio school districts improved their performance index scores over last year's scores (2004-05 school year).

  Districts are also measured on Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP), a federal mandate that holds schools responsible for subgroups' performance in addition to all other students' performance. (ODE's examples of subgroup members are students with disabilities, ethnic and racial minorities, and economically disadvantaged.) AYP is linked to the federal program No Child Left Behind.  

  All local districts met AYP except for New Bremen, Celina and Parkway.

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