Three Los Angeles County public schools are proving that poverty doesn’t have to dictate academic success.
A new national report has identified five California public schools that are dramatically outperforming expectations when it comes to teaching children how to read — and three LA County schools that serve student populations where more than 90% of children live in poverty.
The findings come from education news outlet The 74, which analyzed reading scores from nearly 42,000 public schools around the country to identify campuses where literacy rates far exceeded what researchers would typically expect based on poverty levels.
The publication identified five standout schools in each state, and Los Angeles County claimed three of California’s spots.
Leading the pack is PUC Milagro Charter, where an astonishing 92.3% of third graders met reading proficiency standards despite serving a student body with a 90.6% poverty rate. Based on that poverty level, researches estimated that only about 26.6% of students would be expected to read at the level, making the school’s results one of the most dramatic success stories in the state.
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Not far behind is Compton’s Lifeline Education Charter School. Facing a 95.8% poverty rate, statistical models predicted only 23.6% of its third graders would hit their reading benchmarks. Instead, Lifeline’s students soared, hitting an actual proficiency score of 78.1%.
Similarly, Hoover Street Elementary School proved that zip codes don’t define destiny. With a 97.1% poverty rate, which typically correlates to a predicted 22.9% literacy rate, Hoover Street’s third graders punched way about their weight class, scoring an actual reading proficiency of 77.9%.
The other two California schools that made the list are Chin (John Yehall) Elementary in San Francisco County and Merton E. Hill Elementary School in Orange County.
The analysis used spring 2024 third grade reading scores alongside 2023-24 federal poverty data, covering more than 41,800 schools, 10,000 districts and over 3.1 million students nationwide. Poverty levels were determined by examining the percentage of students who qualified for free and reduced price lunch, and a family’s participation in one or more federal relief programs.
For LA County, the findings suggest that some of California’s strongest reading instruction is happening in neighborhoods facing tough economic challenges.
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