Education
On April 24, nearly two years after they were due, the Texas Education Agency released public school accountability ratings for the 2022-23 school year. This is the rst time since 2019 that schools have received complete ratings, due to LISD Superintendent Bruce Gearing said doing so was an expression of the district’s dedication to ensure the accountability ratings are based on a system that provides “clear signalizing of improvement and success.” Liberty Hill and Leander ISDs 2022 23 TEA ratings released the COVID-19 pandemic and two lawsuits. The TEA has provided a “what if” score for 2021- 22, which is the grade the district would have received using the 2023 model, for year-over-year comparison. After joining the lawsuit in 2023,
Liberty Hill ISD
District score The “What-if” rating scores the 2021-22 data using the 2022-23 methodology as a comparison point. 2022-23 2021-22 “what if”
Percent of students per rating
Reading This shows how well a district is ensuring that all student groups are successful. Closing the gaps Math
14%
A
61% 37% African American 69% 55% Two or More Races
54% 42% Hispanic
70% 58% White
80%
B
6%
C
64% 40% American Indian 44% 0% Pacic Islander
45% 36% High Focus* 67% 55% All Students
B
C
0% D
0%
F
86% 86% Asian
85/100
79/100
School scores
*HIGH FOCUS INCLUDES ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS, ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS AND THOSE IN SPECIAL EDUCATION CLASSES
School
2021-22 “what if”
2022-23
Burden Elementary
A
A
Percentage of students approaching grade level or above on STAAR tests
Four-Year Graduation Rate
Liberty Hill Elementary
B
B
Liberty Hill High School
C
B
State
District
State
District
Liberty Hill Middle School
C
B
Louine Noble Elementary
C
B
Rancho Sienna Elementary
A
B
Santa Rita Elementary
B
B
Reading
Math
Science
Social Studies
Santa Rita Middle School
B
B
SOURCE: TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCYCOMMUNITY IMPACT
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