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| Educating All Students for Success in Life | ||
| Location | Anchorage, Alaska | |
| Superintendent |
Carol Comeau |
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| Enrollment |
49,492 in 2009-10 |
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| Website | ||
The Anchorage School District (ASD) manages all public schools within the Municipality of Anchorage in the U.S. state of Alaska. It is the 93rd largest school district in the United States, serving nearly 50,000 students at over 90 schools. District superintendent Carol Comeau, appointed in December 2000,[1] is set to retire June 30, 2012. She will be replaced by Jim Browder.[2]
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In the 2009-10 school year, the Anchorage School District enrolled approximately 49,420 students; of which 35.6% were economically disadvantaged. In terms of race and ethnicity, the Anchorage School District is considered a minority-majority district, meaning the minority groups make up the majority of the district's population. Non-white students make up roughly 52 percent of the school district's student body.
Composition:[3]
| 48% | White |
| 6% | Black |
| 10% | Hispanic |
| 14% | Asian/Pacific Islander |
| 9% | American Indian/Alaska Native |
| 13% | Multi-ethnic |
The district served approximately 8,600 students with special needs who were eligible for special education services in 2008-09. Also that year, the district's English Language Learner program for students with limited English Proficiency served 5,808 students and the Gifted program assisted 3,563 students.[4]
In 2008-09, the district's graduation rate was 70.48 percent. It has increased nearly 11 percentage points since the 2004-05 school year. The dropout rate for ASD students is 3.43 percent, a figure that has been cut nearly in half since the 2004-05 school year. [5]
In 2009-10, ASD had 48 teachers certified by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. National board certification is voluntary and involves a rigorous performance-based assessment that takes one to three years for a successful candidate to achieve. The certification complements, but does not replace, a state’s teacher certificate. It is valid for 10 years and establishes the teacher as “highly qualified” and a “master” teacher in the eyes of the district and state.
In 2009-10, 99 percent of new teachers were highly qualified. The remaining 1 percent were unable to prove their HQT status and were terminated. As of the May 1, 2010 the state HQT reports 95.4 percent of ASD teachers had an HQT designation in the content area they were teaching. To put this into perspective almost six years after the State adopted regulations mandating that urban District's limit instruction in core classes to HQ teachers, ASD is still out of compliance, while HQ requirements can be via Praxis examinations.
The district also has approximately 225 certificated employees such as counselors, psychologists, speech p[6]
ASD's last curriculum audit was conducted in 2002. Source:[7]
The district releases test scores each fall in a comprehensive report called Profile of Performance. See [8] Expect the Best is a condensed version of that 2,000 page document: it is put forward as an annual report to the community.
In 2008-09 test scores remained relatively flat. Language arts scores declined from 81.4 to 80.4 percent and math scores declined from 73.7 to 71.4 percent since last year. These scores follow three years of steady growth.
In order to make AYP (adequate yearly progress) each school must meet up to 31 specific targets that have been established by the state in which the district is located. [9] Proficiency on state adopted measurements, test participation, attendance, and graduation rates are used to determine AYP for each school each year. 2008-09 school-wide results for the district’s 96 schools are as follows: • 96 percent met the test participating requirement. • 85 percent met the language arts requirement. • 89 percent met the math requirement. • 97 percent met the attendance/graduation requirement. Thirty nine ASD schools met every requirement for which they were accountable. Fifteen missed AYP by just one target; 42 schools missed by two or more targets. Complete coverage, including historical statistics, of federal AYP requirements is available on the district's website.[10]
Of course, AYP proficiency in Alaska, is not equivalent to NAEP proficiency. In 2009, only some 27% of students in Alaska were proficient in Reading. [11] For some reason, though Anchorage's population exceeded 250,000 NAEP did not include Anchorage in its review of Urban Districts. [12]
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