The Oakland Military Institute (OMI) enrolled 530 students in 2008-2009. Two hundred fifty-three were in grades 6-8 and 257 were in grades 9-12.
The
The total enrollment at Jerry Brown’s two charter schools was 938 students, or 2% of the students enrolled in all of OUSD (46,516).
1. Comparing demographics of Jerry’s charter schools with OUSD’s traditional, comprehensive public high schools
The schools have quite different demographics, especially in regard to Students with Disabilities, English Learners, and Average Parent Education Level.- OSA has a lower percentage of Socioeconomically Disadvantaged students (Participants in Free or Reduced-Price) than the lowest percentage of any TCPHS (20% vs. 50%).
- OMI has a higher percentage of Socioeconomically Disadvantaged students than the highest percentage of any TCPHS (75% vs. 73%).
- OSA has a markedly higher Average Parent Education Level than the other four schools.
- OMI has the highest percentage of English Learners.
SCHOOL DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS 2008-2009 | |||||
Percentages | SHS | OTHS | OHS | OSA | OMI |
African American | 37 | 50 | 28 | 57 | 29 |
Asian | 22 | 19 | 48 | 4 | 26 |
Hispanic or Latino | 25 | 16 | 19 | 11 | 36 |
White (not of Hispanic origin) | 10 | 10 | 1 | 15 | 4 |
Participants in Free or Reduced-Price Lunch | 50 | 57 | 73 | 20 | 75 |
English Learners | 13 | 10 | 23 | 0 | 37 |
Students with Disabilities | 12 | 11 | 11 | 0 | 5 |
Average Parent Education Level* | 2.74 | 2.85 | 2.08 | 3.64 | 2.46 |
Looking at the past four years:
- Both OSA and OMI manage to avoid teaching Students with Disabilities.
- OSA manages to avoid teaching English Learners.
% STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES | |||
OMI | OSA | OUSD | |
2005-2006 | 4 | 7 | 10 |
2006-2007 | 6 | 1 | 10 |
2007-2008 | 4 | 3 | 10 |
2008-2009 | 5 | 0 | 10 |
% ENGLISH LEARNERS | |||
OMI | OSA | OUSD | |
2005-2006 | 32 | 0 | 26 |
2006-2007 | 36 | 0 | 26 |
2007-2008 | 40 | 0 | 30 |
2008-2009 | 37 | 0 | 29 |
2.Comparing the AYP of Jerry’s charter schools with OUSD’s traditional, comprehensive public high schools
The Annual Progress Reports for 2009 reveal that both schoolwide and for the typically lowest performing subgroups, Jerry’s schools aren’t generally doing that well compared to OUSD’s traditional, comprehensive public high schools. This is based on the AYP, the federal measure of student achievement using California High School Exit Exam scores of 10th grade students. Keep in mind that OSA has, by far, the most educated parent body.On a schoolwide basis:
- OSA’s ELA score was higher than OUSD’s top performing TCPHS (58.6% vs. 50.7%).
- OMI’s ELA score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (40.3% vs. 43.8%).
- OSA’s Math score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (32.9% vs. 46.6%).
- OMI’s Math score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (29.5% vs. 46.6%).
- OSA’s ELA score was higher than OUSD’s top performing TCPHS (54.0% vs. 38.0%).
- OMI’s ELA score was barely higher than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (38.8% vs. 38.0%).
- OSA’s Math score was nearly identical to OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (23.6% vs. 23.5%).
- OMI’s Math score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (18.8% vs. 23.5%).
- OSA’s ELA score was higher than OUSD’s top performing TCPHS (65.0% vs. 46.0%).
- OMI’s ELA score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (31.0% vs. 32.3%).
- OSA’s Math score was lower to OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (33.3% vs. 42.2%).
- OMI’s Math score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (19.0% vs. 42.2%).
- OSA’s ELA score was below OUSD’s top performing TCPHS (42.9% vs. 46.0%) but above the middle performing TCPHS (42.9% vs. 40.9%).
- OMI’s ELA score was just barely higher than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (38.5% vs. 38.0%).
- OSA’s Math score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (27.5% vs. 37.6%).
- OMI’s Math score was lower than OUSD’s lowest performing TCPHS (28.0% vs. 37.6%).
2009 AYP ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS (Target 44.5%) | |||||
SHS | OTHS | OHS | OSA | OMI | |
Schoolwide | 50.7 | 47.7 | 43.8 | 58.6 | 40.3 |
African American | 38.0 | 30.2 | 31.0 | 54.0 | 38.8 |
Asian | 69.4 | 70.0 | 52.9 | 58.3 | 58.6 |
Hispanic/Latino | 38.7 | 46.0 | 32.3 | 65.0 | 31.0 |
White | 82.1 | 92.3 | na | 74.2 | na |
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged | 40.9 | 38.0 | 46.0 | 42.9 | 38.5 |
English Learners | 23.3 | 33.3 | 28.2 | na | 39.6 |
Students with Disabilities | 21.6 | 22.0 | 26.2 | na | na |
2009 AYP MATH (Target 43.5%) | |||||
SHS | OTHS | OHS | OSA | OMI | |
Schoolwide | 50.3 | 46.6 | 52.2 | 32.9 | 29.5 |
African American | 28.8 | 25.0 | 23.5 | 23.6 | 18.8 |
Asian | 78.9 | 77.9 | 70.4 | 58.3 | 57.1 |
Hispanic/Latino | 42.9 | 43.1 | 42.2 | 33.3 | 19.0 |
White | 78.9 | 94.9 | na | 48.4 | na |
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged | 43.9 | 37.6 | 55.9 | 27.5 | 28.0 |
English Learners | 36.3 | 39.4 | 52.3 | na | 35.0 |
Students with Disabilities | 29.2 | 13.5 | 23.8 | na | na |
2009 AYP REPORT GRADUATION RATE | ||||
SHS | OTHS | OHS | OSA | OMI |
89.2 | 86.2 | 83.9 | 93.0 | 82.1 |
3. Comparing the API of Jerry’s charter schools with OUSD’s traditional, comprehensive public high schools
The Academic Performance Index (API), a figure derived from a calculation which incorporates the test scores of all students. The state uses this growth accountability model. Comparative API figures are much better than the federal measure for Jerry Brown’s charter schools, with the exception of the fact that OSA lost 26 API points last year. That is a huge drop.
As far as these figures go, one must be aware that when a school has 10% of its population in a very low performing category (Students with Disabilities), this will affect the overall API, because those scores are included in API calculations of other subgroups. The only way that the API of schools can avoid being affected by this influence is by limiting the number of disabled students who enroll.
2009 API | |||||
SHS | OTHS | OHS | OSA | OMI | |
2009 Growth (school wide) | 667 | 643 | 633 | 723 | 708 |
2008 Base (school wide) | 657 | 622 | 630 | 749 | 695 |
2008-09 Growth (school wide) | +10 | +21 | +3 | -26 | +13 |
African American API/growth | 596/+15 | 532/-8 | 543/+23 | 692/-17 | 667/+40 |
Asian API/growth | 790/-4 | 775/+10 | 710/-2 | nss | 797/-19 |
Hispanic/Latino API/growth | 607/-1 | 653/+7 | 559/+9 | nss | 683/+22 |
White API/growth | 791/-5 | 896/na | nss | nss | nss |
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged API/growth | 641/+17 | 606/+4 | 641/+6 | 660/nss | 701/+9 |
English Learners API/growth | 645/+47 | 668/na | 632/+38 | nss | 718/-7 |
Students with Disabilities API/growth | 484/+21 | 410/+38 | 427/+52 | nss | nss |
4. Comparing AP Exam results of Jerry’s charter schools with OUSD’s traditional, comprehensive public high schools
Apparently, OSA has not been offering AP exams to its students during the year which is most recently posted. I suspect the school doesn’t offer AP classes.The AP exam pass rate for OMI is absolutely non-impressive. It’s lower than the pass rate of the lowest TCPHS, and even lower than the district’s pass rate. District-wide, 720 passed and 1,838 failed. The total number of tests taken was 2,558, so the pass rate was 28.2%.
AP EXAM RESULTS - Year 2007-08* | |||||
SHS | OTHS | OHS | OSA | OMI | |
Grade 12 Enrollment | 451 | 310 | 371 | 54 | 49 |
Grades 11 + 12 Enrollment | 934 | 653 | 806 | 98 | 110 |
Number of test takers | 369 | 207 | 291 | 0 | 45 |
Exam score = 1 | 217 | 83 | 332 | - | 53 |
Exam score = 2 | 227 | 77 | 143 | - | 25 |
Exam score = 3 | 157 | 67 | 66 | - | 10 |
Exam score = 4 | 77 | 69 | 31 | - | 4 |
Exam score = 5 | 33 | 64 | 7 | - | 2 |
Number of passed tests | 267 | 200 | 104 | No AP tests | 16 |
Number of failed tests | 444 | 160 | 475 | 78 | |
Total number of tests taken | 711 | 360 | 579 | 94 | |
% of tests passed | 37.6% | 55.6% | 18.0% | 17.0% | |
Average number of tests taken/student | 1.93 | 1.74 | 1.99 | 2.01 |
5. Comparing SAT scores of Jerry’s charter schools with OUSD’s traditional, comprehensive public high schools
As one would expect, average SAT scores for all five high schools correlate almost perfectly with their average income and parent education levels. And this is well into the years of NCLB.
SAT SCORES Year 2007-08* | |||||
SHS | OTHS | OHS | JB’s OSA | JB’s OMI | |
Grade 12 Enrollment | 451 | 310 | 371 | 54 | 49 |
Number tested | 273 | 223 | 242 | 45 | 44 |
Percent tested | 60.53 | 71.94 | 65.23 | 83.33 | 89.90 |
Critical reading average | 477 | 454 | 405 | 512 | 415 |
Math average | 499 | 459 | 452 | 464 | 450 |
Writing average | 474 | 452 | 406 | 511 | 410 |
Total >= 1,500 Number | 120 | 72 | 41 | 25 | 11 |
Total >= 1,500 Percent | 44.0% | 32.3% | 16.9% | 55.6% | 25.0% |
Total of average scores | 1450 | 1365 | 1263 | 1487 | 1275 |
Ranking of average SAT scores (totaled)
- OSA
- SHS
- OTHS
- OMI
- OH
- OSA
- SHS
- OTHS
- OMI
- OH
- OSA
- OTHS
- SHS
- OMI
- OH
- OSA
- SHS
- OTHS
- OH
- OMI
All figures were obtained on 10/23/09 at the CDE's DataQuest.
3 comments:
First of all, you have neglected to acknowledge the fact that all 3 OMI graduating class of seniors had approximately 70% or higher who were accecpted into 4 year colleges - compared to OUSD stats- I believe are about 10 to 20%. The whole point of a charter school is to offer alternative educational options. While Mayor, Jerry Brown never had the power to affect OUSD. How dare you malign him for being committed to doing what he could for the 2 schools he worked so hard to create. Your article, "stats," and charts are obviously skewed to influence your readers.
Anonymous: The figures I display are those available to the public at DataQuest. I formatted them into simple comparative tables using the same terminology selected by the CDE for the AYP, AP Exam, and SAT reports. The only thing I selected out were the minor subgroups, and more obscure demographic information like the percentage of Reclassified Fluent-English-Proficient students, Student Mobility, etc. For your information, the CDE doesn’t produce a report on the college matriculations of senior students.
So if you believe that presenting this data in such a rather flat way is inaccurate, so be it. Since you came to this blog being a Jerry Brown charter school supporter, the figures as they were presented – set next to Oakland’s three intact high schools – would most certainly make you cringe. I would feel the same way.
I was actually quite surprised myself to see how poorly those schools were doing – in terms of the PUBLICLY available reports I mentioned above, and considering their extremely high per pupil spending. (At least that is where I presume the money is being spent, but who knows?)
The primary reason a charter school would have a higher college matriculation rate than the wider school district is because they provide a way for the most compliant set (and thus more academically successful) of students and parents to be segregated from the general population. Parent ability-grouping is the ultimate in tracking.
This small set of kids is given a ton of extras, discretely provided by generous donors like Indian casinos, private equity firms, and school privatization forces (the Walton Family Foundation). For your information, school privatization forces are especially interested in making the charter schools “appear” better because their goal is to undermine the public schools as quickly as they can. Their generosity is only temporary until this can be accomplished.
There are plenty of parents who have not bought into the myth of charter school superiority who continue to send their kids to the traditional public schools and are very satisfied with the outcome. Yes, their children attend school with less fortunate children who were stuck with parents who are less able to support the school’s mission.
The charter schools are hastening and enhancing an already extreme amount of social class isolation. The farther down this path we go, the less fortunate children will have no role models external to their group and will have no exposure to different peer behaviors or alternative points of view.
Skyline High School has a fantastic Jr. ROTC program, by the way, and the students involved in it are HIGHLY successful, including going on to West Point, Stanford, and other fine colleges. You should check it out if you are under the impression that OMI is the only option in town.
You need to add one more chart containing per student spending data available from the School Report Cards. Last time I checked OSA per student spending was 300% (that's not a typo!) of spending at SHS and OTHS.
Post a Comment