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September 3, 2010Ouch! Madison schools are 'weak'? and College Station's School DistrictWisconsin State Journal Editorial Another national magazine says Madison is one of the nation's best cities in which to raise a family.Madison School Board member Ed Hughes compares WKCE scores, comments on the Kiplinger and Wisconsin State Journal article and wonders if anyone would move from Madison to College Station, TX [map], which Kiplinger's ranked above our local $15,241 2009/2010 per student public schools. I compared Madison, WI to College Station, TX using a handy Census Bureau report. 93.8% of College Station residents over 25 are high school graduates, a bit higher than Madison's 92.4%.Madison does have a higher median household and per capita income along with a population about three times that of College Station. Turning to the public school districts, readers might be interested in having a look at both websites: the College Station Independent School District and the Madison Metropolitan School District. 75% of College Station students took the ACT (average score: 22.6) while 67% of Madison students took the exam and achieved a composite score of 24.2. College Station publishes a useful set of individual school report cards, which include state and national test results along with attendance and dropout data. College Station's 2009-2010 budget was $93,718.470, supporting 9,712 students = $9,649.76 per student. . They also publish an annual check register, allowing interested citizens to review expenditures. Madison's 2009-2010 budget was $370,287,471 for 24,295 students = $15,241 per student, 57.9% higher than College Station. College Station's A and M Consolidated High School offers 22 AP classes while Madison East offers 12, Memorial 25 (8 of which are provided by Florida Virtual...), LaFollette 13 and West 8. College Station's "student profile" notes that the District is 59.3% white, 31.4% are economically disadvantaged while 10.3% are in talented and gifted. Texas's 2010 National Merit Semifinalist cut score was 216 while Wisconsin's was 207. College Station's high school had 16 National Merit Semi-Finalists (the number might be 40 were College Station the same size as Madison and perhaps still higher with Wisconsin's lower cut score) during the most recent year while Madison's high schools had 57. Posted by Jim Zellmer at September 3, 2010 7:59 PMSubscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas |