National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) 2012 Wave II (Grade 4/8/12 Pilots, Grade 12 Economics, SD, ELL, and Special Studies)

National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) 2011-13 System Clearance

Part 6 School Economics Questionnaire

National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) 2012 Wave II (Grade 4/8/12 Pilots, Grade 12 Economics, SD, ELL, and Special Studies)

OMB: 1850-0790

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NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF
EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS
WAVE 2 SUBMITTAL FOR 2012
VOLUME II
Part 6
ECONOMICS SCHOOL
QUESTIONNAIRE
FOR 2012 ASSESSMENT

Part 6 contains:
School Grade 12 Questionnaire (School Characteristics and Policies + Economics +
Charter School)

June 1, 2011
2012 OMB Wave 2

THE NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF
EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS

Wave 2 Submittal for 2012
VOLUME II
Part 6a
BACKGROUND QUESTIONS
FOR 2012 ASSESSMENT
School Pilot Grade 12

Part 6a contains:
School Grade 12:

School Characteristics and Policies (Operational) Questions
Economics-specific Questions
Charter School Questions

The amount of time estimated to complete this form is 30 minutes.

SCHOOL QUESTIONNAIRES
OMB Information on School Questionnaire Cover Page
Paperwork Burden Statement
According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are required to
respond to a collection of information unless such collection displays a valid
OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this information
collection is 1850-0790. The time required to complete this information collection
is estimated to average 30 minutes including the time to review instructions,
search existing data resources, gather the data needed, and complete and review
the information collection. If you have any comments concerning the accuracy
of the time estimate(s) or suggestions for improving this form, please write
to: U.S. Department of Education, Washington, D.C. 20202-4537. If you have
comments or concerns regarding the status of your individual submission of
this form, write directly to: NAEP/NCES, U.S. Department of Education, 400
Maryland Avenue, S.W., Washington, DC 20202.
A project of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), Institute of
Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education.
The information you provide will be used for statistical purposes only. In
accordance with the Confidential Information Protection provisions of Title V,
Subtitle A, Public Law 107-347 and other applicable Federal laws, your responses
will be kept confidential and will not be disclosed in identifiable form to anyone
other than employees or agents. By law, every NCES employee as well as every
agent, such as contractors and NAEP coordinators, has taken an oath and is
subject to a jail term of up to 5 years, a fine of up to $250,000, or both if he or she
willfully discloses ANY identifiable information about you.
OMB No. 1850-0790 Approval Expires 04/30/2013

School Questionnaire – Grade 12
This questionnaire should be completed by the principal or the head of the school.

Some of the questions that follow ask you to fill in specific numbers.
For those questions, please print the appropriate numbers in the boxes
provided. Please PRINT LEGIBLY. Using one number per box, fill in
every box. Keep all printing within the boxes. Do not make any stray
marks. Use only a No. 2 pencil.

Example:
150 would be written as

,
Examples of numerals are:

I3SQ-SC

Page 3

Part I: School Characteristics and Policies
VB337248

1. What grades are taught in your school? Fill in all ovals that apply.

A Pre-kindergarten
B Kindergarten
C 1st grade
D 2nd grade
E 3rd grade
F 4th grade
G 5th grade
H 6th grade
I 7th grade
J 8th grade
K 9th grade
L 10th grade
M 11th grade
N 12th grade

VB337250

2. What is the current enrollment in your school?

,

I3SQ-SC

Page 4

VE462942

3. Approximately what percentage of twelfth-graders in your school is new this year?

%

VB337256

4. Of the students currently enrolled in your school, what percentage has been identified as
limited-English proficient?

A 0%
B 1–5%
C 6–10%
D 11–25%
E 26–50%
F 51–75%
G 76–90%
H Over 90%

VC310911

5. Is your school a public charter school?
(A charter school is a public school that, in accordance with an enabling state statute, has
been granted a charter exempting it from selected state or local rules and regulations. A
charter school may be a newly created school, or it may previously have been a public or
private school.)

A Yes
B No

I3SQ-SC

Page 5

VC311331

6. What other type of school is this? Fill in one oval on each line.
Yes

No

a. Regular secondary school

A

B

VC311335

b. A regular school with a magnet program

A

B

VC311336

c. A magnet school or a school with a special
program emphasis, e.g., science/math school,
performing arts high school, talented/gifted school,
foreign language immersion school

A

B

VC311338

d. Special education: a school that primarily serves
students with disabilities

A

B

VC311343

e. Vocational/technical: a school that primarily
serves students being trained for occupations

A

B

VC311346

f. Alternative: a school that offers a curriculum
designed to provide alternative or nontraditional
education, not clearly categorized as regular,
special education, or vocational

A

B

VC311350

g. Private (independent)

A

B

VC311351

h. Private (religiously affiliated)

A

B

VC311353

i. Privately run public school

A

B

VC311354

j. Other

A

B

VC311358

HE000917

7. About what percentage of your students is absent on an average day? (Include excused and
unexcused absences in calculating this rate.)

A 0–2%
B 3–5%
C 6–10%
D More than 10%

I3SQ-SC

Page 6

LC000488

8. About what percentage of your teachers is absent on an average day? (Include all absences in
calculating this rate.)

A 0–2%
B 3–5%
C 6–10%
D More than 10%

HE000918

9. About what percentage of students who are enrolled at the beginning of the school year is
still enrolled at the end of the school year? (Exclude students who transfer into the school
during the school year in figuring this rate.)

A 98–100%
B 95–97%
C 90–94%
D 80–89%
E 70–79%
F 60–69%
G 50–59%
H Less than 50%

I3SQ-SC

Page 7

HE002094

10. Does your school participate in the National School Lunch Program?

A Yes ➔ Go to Question 11.
B No ➔ Skip to Question 14.

VB556173

11. How does the school operate the program?

A Student eligibility is determined individually, and eligible students receive free or
reduced-price lunch. ➔ Skip to Question 13.

B All students in school receive free lunch under special provisions
(e.g., Provision 2 or 3). ➔ Go to Question 12.

VE636868

12. If your school distributes free lunch to all students under Provision 2 or 3, what was the
base year during which individual student eligibility was collected?

A This school does not distribute free lunch to all students under Provision 2 or 3—
eligibility is determined annually.

B 2011
C 2010
D 2009
E 2008
F 2007
G 2006 or earlier

I3SQ-SC

Page 8

VB608487

13. During this school year, about what percentage of students in your school was eligible
to receive a free or reduced-price lunch through the National School Lunch Program?

A 0%
B 1–5%
C 6–10%
D 11–25%
E 26–34%
F 35–50%
G 51–75%
H 76–99%
I 100%

VB608488

14. Does your school receive Title I funding? (Title I is a federally funded program that
provides educational services, such as remedial reading or remedial math, to children who
live in areas with high concentrations of low-income families.)

A No
B Yes, our school receives funds, which are targeted to eligible students.
C Yes, our school receives funds, which are used for schoolwide purposes.

I3SQ-SC

Page 9

VB485284

15. Approximately what percentage of students in your school receives the following services?
Fill in one oval on each line. Students who receive more than one service should be counted
for each service they receive. Please report the percentage of students who receive each of the
following services as of the day you respond to this questionnaire.
51-75% 76-90%

Over
90%

E

F

G

H

VB610145

D

E

F

G

H

VB485286

C

D

E

F

G

H

VB485287

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

VB485288

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

VB485289

None

1-5%

6-10%

11-25%

26-50%

a. Targeted Title I services

A

B

C

D

b. Gifted and talented
program

A

B

C

c. Instruction provided in
student’s home
language (non-English)

A

B

d. English-as-a-secondlanguage (not in a
bilingual education
program)

A

e. Special education

A

VB338407

16. Of students in last year’s graduating class, approximately what percentage has gone on to
each of the following types of school? Fill in one oval on each line.
None

1-5%

6-10%

a. Two-year colleges

A

B

b. Four-year colleges or
universities

A

c. Vocational-technical or
business schools

A

I3SQ-SC

51-75% 76-90%

Over
90%

E

F

G

H

VB338408

D

E

F

G

H

VB338409

D

E

F

G

H

VB338410

11-25%

26-50%

C

D

B

C

B

C

Page 10

VE101901

17. During a typical week of school, what is the total number of regularly scheduled volunteers
working in the school?

A 0
B 1–3
C 4–6
D 7–10
E More than 10

VE101552

For all teacher counts entered in item 18:
INCLUDE these types of teachers:
• Regular
• Special area or resource teachers (e.g., special education, Title I, art, music,
physical education)
• Long-term substitute teachers
INCLUDE these types of teachers:
• Itinerant teachers who teach part-time at this school
• Employees reported in other items of this section if they also have a part-time
teaching assignment at this school
DO NOT INCLUDE:
• Student teachers
• Short-term substitute teachers
• Teachers who teach ONLY pre-kindergarten or adult education
18. Around the first of October, how many TEACHERS held full-time or part-time positions or
assignments in this school? If none, mark (0) in the boxes.
a. Full-time
Full-time teachers
b. Part-time
Part-time teachers

I3SQ-SC

Page 11

I-C3SQ-E

a. Economics course (general course
other than Advanced Placement,
International Baccalaureate®, or
honors economics)

I-C3SQ-E

I-C3SQ-E

I-C3SQ-E

I-C3SQ-E

e. Academic competition includes such things
as Fed Challenge, Economics Challenge, or
Academic Decathlon

I-C3SQ-E

VE588470

14. During a typical week of school, what is the total number of regularly scheduled
volunteers, including parents, working in the school?

A0
B 1–5
C 6–10
D 11–15
E 16–25
F More than 25
VE592328

15. Does your school offer any of the following services to students on a regular basis? Fill in
ovals for all that apply.

A Career and technical education workshops
B Career counseling services or programs
C Job placement services
D Career days or job fairs
E Career or employment readiness workshops
VE588677

16. Approximately what percentage of students in your school have parents or guardians who
do each of the following activities? Fill in one oval on each line.
Not
applicable

0–10%

11–25%

26–50%

Over
50%

a. Volunteer regularly to
help in the classroom or
another part of the school

A

B

C

D

E

b. Attend teacher–parent
conferences

A

B

C

D

E

I3SQ-SCX

Page 9

VE588679

VE588681

Part IV: Supplemental Charter School Questions
This section should be completed by the principal or the head of the school. If your school
is a charter school, please continue. If your school is not a charter school, you have finished
the survey. Thank you for your time.

VC311248

1. Is your school a public charter school?

(A charter school is a public school that, in accordance with an enabling state statute, has
been granted a charter exempting it from selected state or local rules and regulations. A
charter school may be a newly created school, or it may previously have been a public or
private school.)

A Yes

Go to Question 2.

B No

You have finished the survey. Thank you for your time.

VC104697

2. In which year did your school start providing instruction as a charter school?

3. Who granted your school’s original charter?

VC104703

A School district
B State board of education (includes State Board of Regents and District of Columbia
Board of Education)

C Postsecondary institution
D State charter-granting agency
E City or state public charter school board
F Other

H3SQ-CH

Page 14

VC104758

4. Which one of the following best describes your charter school’s primary focus in terms of
program content?

A We have a comprehensive curriculum with no specialized area of focus.
B We have a special curricular focus, for example, the arts, math/science, foreign
language immersion.

C Our curriculum is based on a particular educational theory, for example, Montessori,
open school, Core Knowledge.

D Our curriculum is based on a particular moral philosophy or set of values, for
example, African-centered education, character-based education, Eastern philosophy.

VC104799

5. What is the legal status of your school?

A Officially part of the school district or local education agency (LEA)
B Independent from the school district or local education agency (LEA)
C A separate local education agency (LEA) as stipulated by state law

H3SQ-CH

Page 15


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