'Show-Me: The Grades' Provides Free, Useful Tool for Comparing Academic Performance of Missouri Public Schools
May 15, 2008

A new online application created by Justin Hauke, a policy analyst with the Show-Me Institute, provides Missouri families with a series of free and useful tools for  comparing public schools across the state. Students, parents, school administrators, teachers, legislators, and other citizens now have a resource for better understanding academic performance in Missouri.

“Missouri public school performance needs to be more transparent,” Hauke said. “When families are concerned about the education their children are receiving, or if they are considering moving to a new neighborhood, they should be able to easily access performance information. They may want to know how their current or new school compares to others in their district, and to the state as a whole. We wanted to make finding that information as easy as possible. “Show-Me: The Grades” saves parents the legwork of wading through district and state education websites in search of answers.”

The “Show-Me: The Grades” tool comprises three useful applications. First, a school “report card” generator allows users to graphically compare a selected school’s academic performance to that of its district average and the state average. Second, a “school ranker” permits users to compare a selected school’s academic rank to the rankings of other schools in Missouri. Third, a “district ranker” enables users to compare their school district’s academic rank and per-student spending to the rankings of other districts across the state.

“Show-Me: The Grades” is a series of Microsoft Excel documents easily downloadable from the Show-Me Institute’s web site at www.showmeliving.org. These applications use academic performance data collected by the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) for each of the 541 public school districts and approximately 2,000 public and publicly chartered schools in the state.

Academic rank is measured by the weighted average of each school’s MAP (Missouri Assessment Program) index score, which is broken down by school, grade level, test (mathematics or communications), and academic year. MAP test scores are divided into four categories by the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, namely, “advanced,” “proficient,” “basic,” and “below basic.”

“Show-Me: The Grades” also provides details about per-student funding in each public school district. Data on per-student funding by school district was collected by dividing aggregate district funding (a combination of federal, state, and local spending) by total district student enrollment. Full data and computation details are provided in a helpful resource guide on the Show-Me Institute’s website.

The author of “Show-Me: The Grades,” Justin Hauke, is a policy analyst at the Show-Me Institute and a graduate student of finance at Washington University’s Olin Business School. He has an undergraduate degree in economics and mathematics from the University of Texas at Austin.

 

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