California Montessori Project's School Accountability Report Cards include a description of our schools and their staff and students, community involvement, student achievement, student support services, expenditures, school facilities, class size, textbooks, and staff training and evaluation.
The following exerpt was taken from the California Department of Educations website, http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/ac/sa/parentguide.asp, to provide an overview of the School Accountability Report Card (SARC).
Since November 1988, state law has required all public schools receiving state funding to prepare and distribute a SARC. A similar requirement is also contained in the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act. The purpose of the report card is to provide parents and the community with important information about each public school. A SARC can be an effective way for a school to report on its progress in achieving goals. The public may also use a SARC to evaluate and compare schools on a variety of indicators.
Although there is great variation in the design of school report cards, they generally begin with a profile that provides background information about the school and its students. The profile usually summarizes the school's mission, goals, and accomplishments. State law requires that the SARC contain all of the following:
- Demographic data
- School safety and climate for learning information
- Academic data
- School completion rates
- Class sizes
- Teacher and staff information
- Curriculum and instruction descriptions
- Postsecondary preparation information
- Fiscal and expenditure data