School districts by the numbers

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Area schools have received their report cards, and the results showed how are students are doing in math, reading, science and writing.

But the report cards contain more information than how the students are progressing academically. The 2008 Illinois School Report Cards provide information on student demographics and financial information.

School report cards show the results of how students are performing on standardized tests, but they don’t take into account how students differ from each other. Some students enter kindergarten with two years of preschool under their belts, while other students will struggle with identifying their ABCs.

Some students will show the advantages of having been enriched with a variety of cultural experiences, while others will come from homes in which English is rarely spoken.

Some students come from families in which they want for nothing, while others might know what it means to go to bed hungry.

How does your school district measure up?

Low-income

According to the Illinois School Report Card, low-income students come from families receiving public aid; live in institutions for neglected or delinquent children; are supported in foster homes with public funds; or are eligible to receive free or reduced-price lunches.

In Bureau County, the highest number of students who meet that mark are at Leepertown Elementary in Bureau, where 86.5 percent, or about 45 of the 52 students in the district, qualify.

Leepertown is joined by DePue at 68 percent, Spring Valley at 51 percent, and Neponset at 50 percent on the list of schools with a higher percentage of low-come students than the statewide average of 41.1 percent.

According to the numbers, the fewest low-income students are in the Ohio High School District, but high schools figures are often less accurate than those at the grade schools. Many high school students are embarrassed to admit they qualify for a free or reduced lunch, so they don’t fill out the necessary paperwork.

Limited English

Again according to the report card, Limited-English-proficient students are those students eligible for transitional bilingual programs.

In Bureau County, DePue takes the top score, with 24.7, or almost one student out of every four, eligible for the programs.

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