Anonymous wrote:It's a numbers game. I wouldn't read too much into trends. Not impossible that DCPS or charters have become more effective collecting that data. Or there may be different federal guidelines in how these numbers are computed and reported. For example, one notorious difficulty is that beyond a certain threshold a school is eligible for all free lunch. I think that typically gets marked as 99% even though the actual % is way below that.
It would still mean the FARMS rate is up if more schools are reaching that threshold.