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Lame Deer School

Public | PK-6 | 308 students

 

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Community Rating

4 stars

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2010:
Based on 2 ratings

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1 review of this school


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Posted May 4, 2010

Lame Deer High School is the best!!!
—Submitted by a parent


Community ratings and reviews do not represent the views of GreatSchools nor does GreatSchools check their accuracy or verify the reviewers' identities. Use your discretion when evaluating these reviews.

About these ratings

The Community Rating is the school’s average rating from its community members (e.g., parents, students, and school staff). The highest possible rating is five stars; the lowest is one star.

The test results by subgroup show how the designated group of students is performing in comparison to the general population.
Math

The state average for Math was 70% in 2011.

2011

 
 
32%

2010

 
 
25%

2009

 
 
37%

2008

 
 
44%
Reading

The state average for Reading was 85% in 2011.

2011

 
 
49%

2010

 
 
61%

2009

 
 
61%

2008

 
 
71%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

The state average for Math was 70% in 2011.

2011

 
 
20%

2010

 
 
16%

2009

 
 
31%

2008

 
 
14%
Reading

The state average for Reading was 83% in 2011.

2011

 
 
30%

2010

 
 
26%

2009

 
 
47%

2008

 
 
40%
Science

The state average for Science was 62% in 2011.

2011

 
 
3%

2010

 
 
10%

2009

 
 
15%

2008

 
 
23%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

The state average for Math was 72% in 2011.

2011

 
 
13%

2010

 
 
12%

2009

 
 
11%

2008

 
 
12%
Reading

The state average for Reading was 87% in 2011.

2011

 
 
40%

2010

 
 
39%

2009

 
 
32%

2008

 
 
21%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

The state average for Math was 66% in 2011.

2011

 
 
20%

2010

 
 
12%

2009

 
 
26%

2008

 
 
24%
Reading

The state average for Reading was 87% in 2011.

2011

 
 
57%

2010

 
 
58%

2009

 
 
35%

2008

 
 
41%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

All Students32%
Female36%
Male29%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native33%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch32%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities34%
Limited English proficiency40%
Proficient in English27%
Non-migrant32%

Reading

All Students49%
Female59%
Male42%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native50%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch49%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities47%
Limited English proficiency40%
Proficient in English54%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

The different student groups are identified by the Montana Office of Public Instruction. If there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

All Students20%
Female20%
Male20%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native20%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch20%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities21%
Limited English proficiency14%
Proficient in English23%
Non-migrant20%

Reading

All Students30%
Female30%
Male30%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native30%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch30%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities29%
Limited English proficiency21%
Proficient in English35%

Science

All Students3%
Female5%
Male0%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native3%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch3%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities3%
Limited English proficiency0%
Proficient in English4%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

The different student groups are identified by the Montana Office of Public Instruction. If there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

All Students13%
Female13%
Male13%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native14%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch13%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilities0%
Students without disabilities21%
Limited English proficiency6%
Proficient in English18%
Migrantn/a
Non-migrant13%

Reading

All Students40%
Female39%
Male40%
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native41%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch40%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilities21%
Students without disabilities50%
Limited English proficiency25%
Proficient in English50%
Migrantn/a
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

The different student groups are identified by the Montana Office of Public Instruction. If there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Math

All Students20%
Female31%
Male12%
Asian Americann/a
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native20%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch20%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities24%
Limited English proficiencyn/a
Proficient in English19%
Non-migrant20%

Reading

All Students57%
Female77%
Male41%
Asian Americann/a
Hispanic or Latinon/a
American Indian/Alaskan Native57%
White, Non-Hispanicn/a
Participates in free/reduced lunch57%
Not economically disadvantagedn/a
Students with disabilitiesn/a
Students without disabilities68%
Limited English proficiencyn/a
Proficient in English73%
Scale: % proficient or advanced

About the tests


In 2010-2011 Montana used the Criterion-Referenced Test (CRT) to assess students in grades 3 though 8 and 10 in reading and math and in grades 4, 8, and 10 in science. The CRT is a standards-based test, which means it measures specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Montana. The goal is for all students to score at or above the proficient level.

The different student groups are identified by the Montana Office of Public Instruction. If there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.

See Montana's state standards

Source: Montana Office of Public Instruction

Breaking down the GreatSchools Rating

GreatSchools Ratings are based on the most recent standardized test results for schools. Use the breakdown ratings below to compare types of students at this school. Learn more »


Student ethnicity

Ethnicity This school State average
American Indian/Alaska Native 95% 11%
Two or more races 3% 2%
Hispanic 2% 4%
Asian 0% 1%
Black 0% 1%
Hawaiian Native/Pacific Islander 0% 0%
White 0% 82%
Source: NCES, 2010-2011

Student subgroups

  This school District averageState average
Students eligible for free or reduced-price lunch program 99%N/A41%
Source: NCES, 2010-2011

Student-teacher ratio

  This school District averageState average
Students per FTE teacher 11N/A14
Source: NCES, 2008-2009

Resources

Extra learning resources offered
  • Title I Schoolwide program (SWP)
School leaders can update this information here.

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103 West Boundary St
Lame Deer, MT 59043
Phone: (406) 477-6305

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