16th....I'm shocked! You'd never know it by reading this excerpt from today's Providence Journal!
08:41 AM EDT on Friday, October 10, 2003
BY LINDA BORG
Journal Staff Writer
Students in more than one-third of Rhode Island's public schools are performing poorly and the number of high-performing schools has dropped from 41 percent to 28 percent in one year.
Once again, the vast majority of schools needing improvement are concentrated in the urban districts of Central Falls, Newport, Pawtucket, Providence and Woonsocket.
In fact, every urban middle school, which serves sixth through eighth graders, is in need of improvement, continuing a slump identified by last year's test scores.
But there are some surprises in this year's release of school rankings, which are based on standardized tests in English and math given to students in grades 4, 8 and 10. Several districts that have been high fliers now have a significant number of schools listed as in need of improvement.
In Lincoln, an affluent suburban community, four of the town's seven schools are classified as in need of improvement, including both the high school and the middle school. In South Kingstown, three out of seven schools -- including the high school -- are listed as needing improvement, and in rural Burrillville, three schools out of five fall into this category.