Summary:
The Bakerripley Community Schools district in Houston, Texas, serves 884 students across three schools: two elementary schools (Baker-Ripley Charter School and Ripley House Charter School) and one middle school (Ripley House Middle Campus), all serving a very high-need population with over 91% of students eligible for free or reduced lunch.
The standout school in the district is Ripley House Middle Campus, which has shown the strongest improvement, jumping from the 11th percentile to the 44th percentile over two years and earning a 2-star rating—the highest in the district. This school is a math powerhouse: 80% of its students taking Algebra I are proficient, far exceeding the state average of 54%, and its 6th and 7th-grade math scores also outpace state averages. In contrast, the two elementary schools have diverging paths. Baker-Ripley Charter School is on a strong upward trend, rising from the 13th to the 35th percentile, and is the only elementary school to outperform the district average in both 4th-grade Reading (50.79%) and Math (49.21%). Meanwhile, Ripley House Charter School struggles, ranking in the bottom 5% of Texas elementary schools, despite spending more per student ($12,388) than Baker-Ripley ($11,323).
Key metrics reveal a district with low student-teacher ratios (15:1 to 16.3:1) and a 0% dropout rate at the middle school, but significant challenges remain. Science is a critical weakness district-wide, with proficiency rates around 10-21%—roughly half the state average. The middle school spends $15,804 per student, notably higher than the elementary schools, yet this higher spending does not guarantee better performance, as Ripley House Elementary lags behind Baker-Ripley. Grade-level variability is also pronounced; for example, at Baker-Ripley, 4th graders perform well in Reading (50.79%), while 3rd and 5th graders struggle (34.62% and 35.48%), suggesting specific instructional issues that warrant attention.
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