Ed Results Honor Roll

Ed Results Honor Roll Average ratng: 4,3/5 9401 reviews

SACRAMENTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Educational Results Partnership (ERP) today announced its 2017 - 2018 Honor Roll, recognizing higher-performing public schools, school districts, and charter systems in California which excelled in closing achievement gaps among higher-poverty student populations. The 1,798 best-in-class schools and 24 districts were selected using the nation’s largest database on student achievement and can be accessed at www.edresults.org.

The Honor Roll is compiled by ERP, a nonprofit organization that applies data science toward strategies that accelerate student success, improve educational equity, and promote career readiness. In California, the program is sponsored by the Campaign for Business and Education Excellence (CBEE) and is part of a national effort to recognize successful educational systems and highlight practices that are improving student outcomes.

“Educational success must be data-informed,” said Greg Jones, ERP and CBEE board chairman, and former president and CEO of State Farm Insurance. “These Honor Roll schools and districts are improving student achievement and we have the data to prove it. It’s critical that the business community supports and promotes educational success as today’s students are tomorrow’s workforce.”

Those schools and districts that receive the ERP Honor Roll distinction have demonstrated consistently high levels of student achievement, improvement in achievement levels over time, and a reduction in achievement gaps among student populations. The selection process also includes measures of college readiness for recognized high schools. Additionally, the program recognizes STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) schools, which demonstrate high percentages of low-income students with superior achievement in those disciplines.

“At ERP we are committed to closing achievement gaps and removing educational obstacles for historically disadvantaged students,” said James Lanich, Ph.D., ERP president and CEO. “These bright spot schools and districts are implementing programs and practices that are improving educational equity and accelerating student success. We need to shine a spotlight on their work and encourage others to replicate it. Instead of always focusing on what’s ‘wrong,’ we are acknowledging ‘what’s right,’ and encouraging schools, districts and teachers to share best practices,” he said.

Honor Roll Student

In California, the ERP Honor Roll is supported by numerous businesses and organizations, including Automobile Club of Southern California, Macy’s, Wells Fargo, Chevron Corporation and Enterprise Holdings Foundation.

What Is Honor Roll Award

About Educational Results Partnership

Texas Honor Roll Methodology Educational Results Partnership (ERP) uses a data-driven approach called multi-level latent class modeling to identify Texas Honor Roll schools. This statistical technique assumes that: a. Hidden groups (latent classes) of schools exist among a larger set of schools b. Meth sales result in 6.5 year prison sentence for Superior man. Education 2020-21 Superior High School Quarter 1 Honor Roll. Grade 12: Taylee L. Colleges marked with a are on the Honor Roll. View by All types All 4-year colleges All 2-year colleges or All sizes Small (2,999 or fewer) Medium (9,999 to 3,000) Large (10,000 or more.

Honor roll high honor roll

Educational Results Partnership (ERP) is a nonprofit organization that applies data science to help improve student outcomes and career readiness throughout our educational system. In partnership with educators and employers, ERP charts the pathways that lead to academic success and living-wage jobs. ERP’s goal is to ensure that more students are equipped to enter the workforce with the skills today’s global economy demands.

Bryan, OH (43506) Today. Generally cloudy. Winds NW at 10 to 15 mph. 2019-2020 Honor Roll Recipients 2.STAR Schools: schools with greater than, or equal to, 33 percent of students designated as socio-economically disadvantaged (high poverty) Scholar Schools: schools with fewer than 33 percent of students designated as socio-economically disadvantaged (low poverty).