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Is Your State Providing Equal Access to Education?

This database was last updated in January 2013 and should only be used as a historical snapshot of data from the 2009-10 school year. For more recent data on public and charter schools, check out Miseducation.

ProPublica analyzed federal education data from the 2009-2010 school year to examine whether states provide high-poverty schools equal access to advanced courses and special programs that researchers say will help them later in life. This is the first nationwide picture of exactly which courses are being taken at which schools and districts across the country. More than three-quarters of all public school children are represented. Read our story and our methodology.

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Pinnacle High School

3535 E. MAYO BLVD, PHOENIX, ARIZ., 85050 | Grades 9-12

Districts with 3,000 or more students
Students Total Teachers Inexp. Teachers AP Courses
This School
2,330
91
12% 14
District 32.6K 1,654 9% 14
State 850K 43,995 11% 10
 
State Average
 
District Average

Percentage of relevant students who...

Get Free/Reduced Price Lunch

47%
29%

5%

Take at Least One AP Course

14%
18%

22%

AP Pass Rate

58%
70%

75%

Take Advanced Math

13%
15%

18%

Are in a Gifted/Talented Program

8%
13%

17%

Take Chemistry

13%
20%

24%

Take Physics

5%
15%

31%

Participate in sports

35%
0.0%

28%

Are

3%
1%

0% Am Indian
3%
4%

4% Asian
6%
4%

2% Black
43%
24%

6% Hispanic
44%
67%

87% White

Pinnacle High School, part of the Paradise Valley Unified District, is located in Phoenix, Arizona. The school reports an enrollment number of 2,330 students in grades nine through 12, and it has 91 teachers on staff.

Pinnacle High School is below both the state and district averages in terms of the percentage of its students who are eligible for free or reduced-price lunches. On average, 47 percent of students in Arizona are eligible for free or reduced-price lunch programs, while 5 percent of Pinnacle High School students are eligible. At the district level, 29 percent are eligible.

ProPublica's analysis found that all too often, states and schools provide poor students fewer educational programs like Advanced Placement, gifted and talented programs, and advanced math and science classes. Studies have linked participation in these programs with better outcomes later in life. Our analysis uses free and reduced-price lunch to estimate poverty at schools. We based our findings on the most comprehensive data set of access to advanced classes and special programs in U.S. public schools — known as the Civil Rights Data Set— released by the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights.

Pinnacle High School offers 14 AP courses, and 22 percent of students participate in those classes.

The school's pass rate for AP exams of 75 percent is higher than the district average of 70 percent.

A school's AP pass rate is determined by the number of students who both sat for AP exams and passed some or all of those exams.

Pinnacle High School has an enrollment rate of 18 percent for math classes, and 24 percent of students take chemistry. The enrollment rate for physics at the school is 31 percent, and the gifted and talented program has a participation rate of 17 percent.

San Luis High School, in San Luis, Ariz., is a higher-poverty school than Pinnacle High School, with 100 percent of its students eligible for free or reduced-price lunch. The school offers seven AP courses, and 9 percent of students are enrolled in those courses.

These data points were reported by schools and districts to the Office for Civil Rights. For more information about the data, see our full methodology.

— Generated by Narrative Science