Summary:
The six public schools in Altamonte Springs, Florida, part of the highly-rated Seminole County School District, serve a diverse community of over 6,300 students across four elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school, offering a range of academic experiences from standout math programs to efficient high school operations.
Lake Brantley High School stands out as the city's academic leader, achieving a 97.7% graduation rate and a 3-star ranking while spending the least per student ($8,088) and having the largest class sizes (22.9:1), making it a model of efficiency. In contrast, Teague Middle School excels in advanced math acceleration, with 88% of students proficient in Algebra 1 and 100% in Geometry EOCs, creating a strong pipeline to the high school. Among elementary schools, Forest City Elementary School shows notable improvement, rising from the 56th to 63rd percentile in state rankings, while Spring Lake Elementary School faces the greatest challenges with the highest chronic absenteeism rate (32.2%) and poverty rate (84.95%), though it still posts strong 5th-grade science scores (67% proficient).
A key finding is the "6th Grade Math Anomaly," where all four elementary schools achieved 100% proficiency in 6th-grade math FAST exams for two consecutive years, far exceeding district and state averages. This suggests exceptional preparation for advanced math at the elementary level. The data also reveals a clear divide: elementary schools spend 40-57% more per student than the high school, likely due to higher concentrations of at-risk students, yet they achieve lower state rankings. This highlights how different educational challenges at each level require distinct resource allocations, with Altamonte Elementary School and Lake Orienta Elementary School forming a lower-performing tier compared to Forest City and Spring Lake, despite similar poverty rates.
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