Most Viewed Stories
- Nine indicted in alleged land schemes
- UPDATED: Three injured after rollover accident near Emerald Grande; traffic rerouted on br
- ‘CRISIS POINT’: City may declare emergency to address choked up harbor
- Former Navarre baseball coach O'Quinn under investigation
- PIZZA, PIZZA! Two new eateries, Jet’s and Rotolo’s, to serve up slices in Dest
Local schools among best in Florida; see the scores
Schools
in Okaloosa, Santa Rosa and Walton counties continued to rank among the
best in Florida, according to annual school grades released Thursday.
Despite
four schools dropping a letter grade, Okaloosa took the top spot for
the percentage of grade-A schools in the state, with Santa Rosa not far
behind. Walton county schools also saw significant improvement, with
all 14 schools were ranked a grade B or higher. See our database of school grades »
"Our
efforts are paying off, (and) it's evidenced in these scores" said
Walton County Superintendent of Schools Carlene Anderson.
The
school grades were created in 1999 to help keep the public informed
about the performance of schools. The grades are based on the results
of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test in reading, writing, math
and science.
Following the state trend, Choctawhatchee and
Niceville high schools dropped a letter grade, but school officials say
they already are making plans to help students improve.
"Choctawhatchee
and Niceville realize they have some work to do," said Okaloosa County
Superintendent of Schools Alexis Tibbetts. "We're going to improve."
Choctawhatchee
dropped from a grade of B to a C. But Principal Cindy Gates said the
students who were performing below expected levels already had been
identified Thursday, and a plan to improve not only their scores but
their learning ability was in the works.
"We're not sticking
our heads in the sand, we're moving forward," Gates said. "My real goal
is to make sure those students are successful in their moving forward."
In
Santa Rosa County, three schools improved by a letter grade and three
schools dropped a letter grade. And while Superintendent of Schools Tim
Wyrosdick said he was excited to see students improve in areas the
school district had focused on during the previous year, all the
schools - regardless of their grades - had room for improvement.
In
the next year, he said, emphasis will continue to be placed on subjects
such as math and science because students haven't reached their full
potential in those areas yet.
"We're very optimistic about the
direction we're traveling with our curriculum," Wyrosdick said. "(But)
we're not going to be satisfied until we're all A (schools). Any other
goal is really selling ourselves short."
Similar trends were
identified statewide. Sixty-two percent of schools received an "A" on
the annual report card, and only 1 percent of schools failed.
Even as the scores were released, several government officials criticized the grading system, saying its scope was too limited.
"Public
school accountability and progress should be based on the whole body of
work that schools, teachers and students accomplish throughout the year
rather than on a one-day snapshot," said Rep. Franklin Sands,
Democratic leader of the Florida House of Representatives.


