Report: 89% of the 360 students at A. M. Pate Elementary School not on “college track” in 2021-22 school year

Report: 89% of the 360 students at A. M. Pate Elementary School not on “college track” in 2021-22 school year
TX Commissioner of Education Mike Morath 2023 — State Board for Education
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Of the 360 students at A. M. Pate Elementary School in Fort Worth, 321 (89%) “weren’t on the academic track to qualify for college in the 2021-22 school year, according to Ft Worth Times’ analysis of test scores from the Texas Education Agency (TEA). To better understand these statistics, it’s important to know what TSI (Texas Success Initiative) and CCMR (College, Career, and Military Readiness) are, as they are key indicators of a student’s readiness for post-secondary education or career paths.

Primary data on overall student readiness in A. M. Pate Elementary School is derived from the TSI’s assessments, which evaluate student capabilities in reading, writing, and mathematics. Certain students may qualify for exemptions from these assessments. In contrast, CCMR focuses on preparedness for life post-high school, factoring in TSI scores along with other criteria like dual credits, AP/IB exam results, and more, to provide insights into specific subject performance.

In the 2021-22 school year, A. M. Pate Elementary School’s student population was made up of 360 students, of which 26 were African American, 10 Hispanic, two White, and one Pacific Islander students.

Data shows that 40% of A. M. Pate Elementary School five white students, 40% of its two Pacific Islander students, 11% (26) of its 238 African American students, and 10% (10) of its 107 Hispanic students had “mastered” their grade level in the 2021-22 school year and were “on track for college and career readiness,” as measured by state academic standards.

The TEA says students who meet, but haven’t mastered their grade level are “prepared to progress to the next grade,” but are not on a college track.

In 2020-21, the TEA noted that 336 A. M. Pate Elementary School students – equivalent to 94% of the student population – were not on the academic path to college eligibility. This contrasts with 2021-22, where the percentage stood at 89%, marking a 5% decrease from the previous year.

Despite an improvement after the pandemic, Texas students are still struggling to keep a good performance and reach grade level in schools. In the 2021-22 school year, nearly two-thirds (60%) of students were below grade level in math and 48% did not meet the standards in reading language and arts.

According to Chandra Villanueva, director of policy and advocacy for Every Texan, one of the main causes for this is bad funds management. “Your average homeowner is like, ‘Look, I’m paying more and more every single year. Why are my schools still underfunded, overcrowded, my teachers underpaid? Obviously, the schools are doing a bad job with my money,'” she said in an interview. Currently, Texas residents pay more than $70 billion annually in taxes destined to public education.

Gov. Abbott has been calling not only for an end to the main school property tax, but to use public money to support private schools. The initiative is called universal private school choice and, if passed, would allow residents to use taxpayer money to pay for their kids’ private education.

“School choice not only improves education for every kid and every parent who chooses that pathway,” Abbott said at the Texas Capitol on Oct. 16.

Students On and Off College Track by Race at A. M. Pate Elementary School in 2021-22 School Year

Students on College Track by School in Fort Worth ISD in 2021-22 School Year

School Total Students % On College Track
A. M. Pate Elementary School 360 89%
Alice Carlson Applied Learning Center 363 69%
Applied Learning Academy 319 75%
Arlington Heights High School 1,872 90%
Atwood McDonald Elementary School 388 84%
Benbrook Elementary School 465 76%
Benbrook Middle/High School 1,530 82%
Boulevard Heights 44 77%
Bruce Shulkey Elementary School 415 92%
Burton Hill Elementary School 346 60%
Carroll Peak Elementary School 446 89%
Carter Park Elementary School 520 94%
Carter-Riverside High School 1,053 94%
Charles Nash Elementary School 237 85%
Christene C. Moss Elementary School 324 88%
Como Elementary School 381 85%
Como Montessori 199 88%
Daggett Elementary School 533 87%
Daggett Middle School 352 93%
Daggett Montessori 462 70%
David K. Sellars Elementary School 406 83%
De Zavala Elementary School 274 71%
Detention Center 101 100%
Diamond Hill Elementary School 514 86%
Diamond Hill-Jarvis High School 1,042 95%
Dunbar High School 858 95%
East Handley Elementary School 319 90%
Eastern Hills Elementary School 497 90%
Eastern Hills High School 1,135 96%
Elder Middle School 955 92%
Forest Oak Middle School 877 87%
George Clarke Elementary School 386 82%
Glen Park Elementary School 457 83%
Greenbriar Elementary School 506 86%
Harlean Beal Elementary School 270 89%
Hazel Harvey Peace Elementary School 397 91%
Helbing Elementary School 399 90%
Hubbard Elementary School 541 88%
Im Terrell Academy for STEM and Vpa 494 72%
International Newcomer Academy 254 100%
J. T. Stevens Elementary School 464 85%
James Middle School 817 93%
Jean McClung Middle School 790 91%
John T. White Elementary School 445 89%
Kirkpatrick Elementary School 301 88%
Kirkpatrick Middle School 484 88%
Leadership Academy at Forest Oak 6th Grade 349 92%
Leonard Middle School 665 93%
Lily B. Clayton Elementary School 488 66%
Luella Merrett Elementary School 536 85%
M. L. Phillips Elementary School 439 90%
Manuel Jara Elementary School 578 87%
Marine Creek Collegiate High School 372 78%
Maude I. Logan Elementary School 309 81%
Maudrie Walton Elementary School 328 85%
McLean 6TH Grade 435 68%
McLean Middle School 953 76%
McRae Elementary School 583 94%
Meacham Middle School 738 91%
Meadowbrook Elementary School 455 75%
Meadowbrook Middle School 822 91%
Mitchell Boulevard Elementary School 371 85%
Monnig Middle School 586 92%
Moore M. High Elementary School 480 86%
Morningside Elementary School 420 87%
Morningside Middle School 523 94%
Natha Howell Elementary School 358 87%
North Hi Mount Elementary School 385 76%
North Side High School 1,843 94%
O. D. Wyatt High School 1,490 96%
Oakhurst Elementary School 483 78%
Oaklawn Elementary School 497 95%
Paschal High School 2,263 88%
Phalen Leadership Academy at James Martin Jacquet 645 94%
Polytechnic High School 1,324 96%
Richard Junior Wilson Elementary School 616 90%
Ridglea Hills Elementary School 632 74%
Riverside Applied Learning Center 228 80%
Riverside Middle School 873 92%
Rosemont Middle School 1,303 89%
Rufino Mendoza Senior Elementary School 350 93%
Sagamore Hill Elementary School 449 88%
Sam Rosen Elementary School 399 89%
School School Dillow Elementary 425 93%
South Hi Mount Elementary School 502 78%
South Hills Elementary School 670 88%
South Hills High School 1,876 95%
Southwest High School 1,329 95%
Springdale Elementary School 419 82%
Stripling Middle School 566 80%
Success High School 283 94%
Sunrise – McMillan Elementary School 327 92%
Tanglewood Elementary School 499 37%
Tarrant County College South/Fort Worth Collegiate High School 366 85%
Texas Academy of Biomedical 379 84%
Trimble Technical High School 1,696 93%
Van Zandt-Guinn Elementary School 316 91%
Versia Williams Elementary School 309 91%
W. J. Turner Elementary School 399 88%
W. M. Green Elementary School 555 88%
Washington Heights Elementary School 290 92%
Waverly Park Elementary School 715 82%
Wedgwood 6th Grade School 341 92%
Wedgwood Middle School 722 92%
West Handley Elementary School 411 90%
Westcliff Elementary School 513 74%
Westcreek Elementary School 487 87%
Western Hills Elementary School 564 93%
Western Hills High School 917 93%
World Languages Institute 522 84%
Worth Heights Elementary School 502 78%
Young Men’s Leadership Academy 374 84%
Young Women’s Leadership Academy 467 68%

Source: Texas Education Agency.



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