THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: Sunday, April 2, 1995 TAG: 9503310254 SECTION: VIRGINIA BEACH BEACON PAGE: 14 EDITION: FINAL TYPE: Cover Story SERIES: School Report Card SOURCE: Elizabeth Thiel LENGTH: Medium: 57 lines
It's tough to compare Virginia Beach's schools to Suffolk's.
Virginia Beach is a suburban city of nearly 75,000 students. Suffolk is a rural town with less than 10,000 schoolkids. Nearly a quarter of Virginia Beach's students live in poverty; half of Suffolk's kids do.
Still, people traditionally have checked on school systems' performances by comparing them with their neighbors.
A Virginian-Pilot computer analysis shows that there might be a different way.
The analysis grouped Hampton Roads school districts with other districts statewide that were reasonably similar on five demographic characteristics, weighted equally: transience, measured by the percentage of people who remained in the same home from 1985 to 1990; the percentage of people in the locality who were high school graduates; the composite index, a measure of a locality's tax base; average daily membership, a formula for a school system's enrollment; and the percentage of students who qualify for the federal free and reduced-price lunch program, a measure of a school district's poverty level.
The figures came from school districts and the 1990 census.
The analysis was based on an almost identical method used by the Virginia Department of Education in the late 1980s to group school divisions with similar demographics for the purpose of comparing their performance on the state's annual report card.
Department officials dropped the groupings, however, after some school districts complained about being compared with others.
``I think it's probably a pretty good method,'' said E. Sidney Vaughn III, an assessment specialist for Virginia Beach schools.
But Vaughn and other area school officials raised some cautions.
The diverse natures of the 134 school districts statewide makes it difficult to create groups of districts that are truly similar. The computer analysis, for example, groups Virginia Beach with Montgomery County, a school district with less than 9,000 students.
``I'm not filled with fear about the comparison,'' said K. Edwin Brown, Virginia Beach's assistant superintendent for instruction. ``But I think you could make a valid point that no school division is exactly like ours.'' ILLUSTRATION: Graphic with map
Virginia Beach's "Peers"
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Chart
How Virginia Beach Compares to "Peer" School Systems
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by CNB