F E Peacock Middle School
Recent News About F E Peacock Middle School
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84.4 percent of F.e. Peacock teachers stay put; average earns $57,990 per year
The Illinois Schools Report Card finds that 84.4 percent of teachers stay at F.e. Peacock Middle School year to year, according to their 2020 three-year average.
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Statewide test results: white students score 19.9 points higher at F. E. Peacock Middle School
At F. E. Peacock Middle School, a 19.9-point achievement gap persisted between white and hispanic students in 2018.
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Statewide test results: low-income students score 27.9 points lower at F. E. Peacock Middle School
At F. E. Peacock Middle School, a 27.9-point achievement gap persisted between low-income and non-low-income students in 2018.
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Statewide test results: male students score 10.5 points lower at F. E. Peacock Middle School
At F. E. Peacock Middle School, a 10.5-point achievement gap persisted between male and female students in 2018.
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F. E. Peacock Middle School reports 0% truancy rate
The truancy rate at F. E. Peacock Middle School stayed flat at 0 percent during the 2017-18 school year, according to a DuPage Policy Journal analysis of the latest Illinois schools report card.
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84.4 percent of F E Peacock teachers stay put; average earns $57,050.26 per year
More than 84.4 percent of teachers stay at F E Peacock Middle School year to year, according to the 2018 three-year average in the latest Illinois schools report card.
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Statewide test results: 45 percent of F. E. Peacock failed English language arts
About 55 percent of F. E. Peacock Middle School students passed annual English language arts assessments in 2017 and 45 percent of students failed.
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Analysis: 52 percent of F. E. Peacock students fail annual tests
Academic results data released recently reveals 48 percent of F. E. Peacock Middle School students are considered on track for the next grade level.
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Statewide test results: 59 percent of F. E. Peacock students failed math
About 41 percent of F. E. Peacock Middle School students passed annual math assessments in 2017 and 59 percent of students failed.