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New Hampshire

The state of New Hampshire has 176 school districts; statewide funding, achievement and demographic data can be found in the tabs below. Or use the school district links at the bottom of this page to learn more about a specific New Hampshire community.

Funding

Funding Breakdown Chart

WARNING: Data below comes from federal and state policy offices, as opposed to budget division staff. Funding levels will not match exact dollar figures that states and school districts receive. While this data can be used to help analyze policy and trends, it should not be used for local budgeting purposes.
     
Statewide Per-Pupil Expenditure $8,860
Per-Pupil Expenditure Rank of 50 states and the District of Columbia (1=Highest Spending) 17
School Finance Inequity Among Districts in Per-Pupil Dollars $1,323
School Finance Inequity Among Districts in Percentage Terms 14%
School Finance Equity Rank of 50 states and the District of Columbia (1=Most Equitable) 39
Total Federal Direct Aid (Title I & IDEA) to New Hampshire FY 2006 $74,748,826
Total Federal Direct Aid Per Pupil $371
NCLB Title I Estimated FY 2009 Grant (Bush Budget) $39,499,087
NCLB Title I Estimated FY 2008 Grant (At Conference Level) $38,225,000
NCLB Title I Actual FY 2006 Grant $31,001,229
NCLB Title I Actual FY 2004 Grant $29,264,249
IDEA Part B Estimated FY 2009 Grant (Bush Budget) $46,647,648
IDEA Part B Estimated FY 2008 Grant (At Conference Level) $45,170,630
IDEA Part B Actual FY 2006 Grant $43,747,597
IDEA Part B Actual FY 2004 Grant $41,853,659
Impact Aid Basic Support Payments FY 2007 $0
Total School Food Funds FY 2007 $23,179,327
Total School Food Funds FY 2006 $21,625,996
Total School Food Funds FY 2004 $21,254,759

Demographics

Racial/Ethnic Breakdown
Asian: 1.9%
Black: 1.7%
Native American: 0.3%
White: 93.2%
Hispanic: 2.8%
Other: -0.0%
Total Number of Students 201,594
Student Poverty Rate 7.7%
Student Poverty Rate Rank of 50 States and the District of Columbia (1=Lowest Poverty Rate) 1
Free and Reduced Priced Lunch Enrollment Rate 17%
White Students 187,924
Black Students 3,501
Native American Students 637
Asian Students 3,916
Hispanic Students 5,616

Achievement

Achievement Overview

NCLB scores are based on state-defined standards, while NAEP standards are set by the federal government and are consistent nationwide.

Percentage figures presented reflect the proportion of students learning at grade level, according to state NCLB and national NAEP standards, respectively.

The percentage of students deemed proficient as per NCLB scores tends to be higher than the percentage deemed proficient as per NAEP scores, because state-defined standards of proficiency tend to be lower.

State Defined
Proficiency
(NCLB, 2004-05)
Nationally Defined
Proficiency
(NAEP, 2005)
National Rank
Based on 2005
NAEP Results
Grade 4 Students Proficient in Reading 43% 39% 2
Grade 4 Students Proficient in Math 50% 47% 2
Grade 8 Students Proficient in Reading 45% 38% 2
Grade 8 Students Proficient in Math 39% 35% 9

Compare to Other States

Use the form below to select data on which to make a comparison, and determine just how similar other states must be to yours for comparison purposes (e.g. within X percent of New Hampshire's funding, number of students, etc.)

Number of Students:
Percentage of Students in Poverty:
Percentage of Black and Hispanic Students:
Statewide Expenditure Per Pupil:
Average School Finance Inequity Among Districts:
NCLB Title I Actual FY 2007 Grant Per Pupil:
IDEA Part B Actual FY 2007 Grant Per Pupil:
Total FY 2007 Federal Direct Aid Per Pupil:
Grade 4 Reading Proficiency:
Grade 4 Math Proficiency:

Notes & Sources

STATE-LEVEL DATA


FUNDING

  1. Statewide Per-Pupil Expenditure
    U.S. Census Bureau, School Year 2003-2004
    http://www2.census.gov/govs/school/04f33pub.pdf
  2. School Finance Inequity
    Education Finance Incentive Grant Program Definition of Equity, No Child Left Behind, Title I, Part A, Subpart 2, Sec. 1125A
    Note: Hawaii and the District of Columbia only have one school district, so their weighted coefficient is 0 as per Sec. 1125A of Title I of NCLB. Alaska, Kansas, and New Mexico qualify as equalized under the Impact Aid program standard (Title VIII, Sec8009(c)(1)), so they have been assigned a weighted coefficient of 10 as per Sec. 1125A.
  3. NCLB Title I
    Fiscal Years 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, Estimated 2009 (Bush Budget)
    U.S. Department of Education
    http://www.ed.gov/about/overview/budget/statetables/08stbyprogram.xls
  4. IDEA Part B
    Fiscal Years 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, Estimated 2009 (Bush Budget)
    U.S. Department of Education
    http://www.ed.gov/about/overview/budget/statetables/08stbyprogram.xls
  5. Impact Aid Basic Support Payments
    National Association of Federally Impacted Schools, Fiscal Year 2007
  6. School Food Programs
    Child Nutrition Program Data, Food and Nutrition Service – USDA, Fiscal Years 2004, 2006, 2007
    http://www.fns.usda.gov/pd/cnpmain.htm

DEMOGRAPHICS

  1. Student Poverty Rate
    Poverty Rate for School-Age Children, Ages 5-17
    U.S. Census Bureau Small Area Income & Poverty Estimates, 2004
    http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/saipe/national.cgi?year=2004&ascii=#SA51
  2. Free and Reduced Price Lunch Enrollment Rate
    National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, School Year 2005-2006
    http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/
  3. Total Number of Students, Disaggregated by Race
    National Center
    for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, School Year 2005-2006
    http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/

ACHIEVEMENT

  1. State Defined Proficiency Level
    New England Common Assessment Program, State Results, 2005
    http://www.ed.state.nh.us/education/doe/organization/curriculum/NECAP/NECAP_results.htm
  2. Nationally Defined Proficiency Level
    National Assessment of Educational Progress, 2005
    http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/

DISTRICT-LEVEL DATA


FUNDING

  1. District Per-Pupil Expenditure
    National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, School Year 2004-2005
    http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/
  2. District Operating Budget
    U.S. Census Bureau, Public Elementary-Secondary Education Finance Data, 2006
    http://www.census.gov/govs/www/school06.html
  3. NCLB Title I
    Fiscal Years 2004, 2006, 2008
    Thompson Publishing, Title I Online
    http://www.thompson.com/public/nclb/fundinginformation/fundinginformation.html
    Estimated Fiscal Year 2009 (Bush Budget)
    Congressional Research Service, supplied by the Office of Senator Christopher J. Dodd (D-CT)
  4. IDEA Part B
    Fiscal Years 2004, 2006
    New Hampshire's State Special Education Department
    Fiscal Year 2008 at Conference Level, Estimated Fiscal Year 2009 (Bush Budget)
    These grants have been estimated based on the FY 2008 conference appropriation or Bush’s budget request for IDEA Part B and each district’s FY 2006 grant.
  5. Impact Aid Basic Support Payments
    National Association of Federally Impacted Schools, Fiscal Year 2007

DEMOGRAPHICS

  1. Student Poverty Rate
    U.S. Census Bureau Small Area Income & Poverty Estimates, 2004
    http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/saipe/district.html
  2. Free and Reduced Price Lunch Enrollment Rate
    National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, School Year 2005-2006
    http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/
  3. Total Number of Students, Disaggregated by Race
    National Center
    for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data, School Year 2005-2006
    http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/

ACHIEVEMENT

  1. District NCLB
    New England Common Assessment Program, Grade 4, 2005
    http://www.ed.state.nh.us/education/doe/organization/curriculum/NECAP/NECAP.htm

DEFINITIONS

Per-Pupil Expenditure. Statewide per-pupil expenditure equals the total amount of revenue paid out by school systems in the state divided by total school enrollment. It includes funds from federal, state, and local sources and funds spent on day to day operating expenses, such as teacher salaries. It does not include capital expenses, such as school construction.

School Finance Inequity. School finance equity figures presented reflect a definition contained in Title I of the No Child Left Behind Act. That definition examines the differences in per-pupil spending among school districts across a given state. The per-pupil expenditure for every school district is compared to the average per-pupil expenditure for the state and weighted according to size and poverty level.

Indirect aid is support provided for school districts through the federal tax code. For example, a community can use local property taxes to finance local schools, and it costs taxpayers less because local property taxes are deductible on federal income tax returns.

Direct Aid. Direct aid is education funding that comes from the federal government and is distributed directly to states and then given to individual school districts. The figures presented here include only the two largest direct aid funding streams -- the Title I program for disadvantaged students and the IDEA special education program for children with disabilities.

Title I. Title I of the No Child Left Behind Act authorizes direct aid from the federal government to states and school districts to support the additional education needs of children from low-income families.

IDEA. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) authorizes direct aid from the federal government to states and school districts to support the additional education needs of children with disabilities.

Impact Aid Basic Support Payments. Title VIII of the No Child Left Behind Act authorizes direct aid from the federal government to school districts that educate large numbers of "federally connected" children or have been impacted by the lost property tax revenue on federal lands (i.e. military bases or Native American reservations).

Student Poverty Rate. The student poverty rate reflects the number of children in a state ages 5 to 17 living beneath the Census Bureau's poverty line. In 2004, the poverty income threshold for a family of four was $19,157.

Free and Reduced Priced Lunch Enrollment Rate. The student poverty rate based on free and reduced price lunch eligibility reflects the number of students in the state who are certified to receive free or reduced price lunches based on their family incomes or participation in Food Stamp or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families programs.

Total School Food Funds. The National School Lunch Act authorizes the distribution of federal funds to states and school districts to provide nutritious lunches, breakfasts and snacks to low income students at free or reduced prices.

Achievement. State-defined proficiency standards of what students should know and be able to do in each grade are developed separately by each state. States use these standards to test and assess whether students are performing adequately, as required under the No Child Left Behind Act.

Nationally-defined proficiency standards of what students should know and be able to do are developed by the National Assessment Governing Board. The Board administers a national test to a representative sample of students-the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)-that measures whether students are performing at grade level.

Percentage figures presented reflect the proportion of students learning at grade level according to state NCLB and national NAEP standards, respectively.

spreadsheet icon All the available data for New Hampshire is available for download as a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet.


New Hampshire School Districts (176)

The full list of New Hampshire school districts is below. Click on any name for funding, achievement and demographic data for that district, or use this form to narrow down the list.

Show Only Districts Where The Name...
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Albany School District
Allenstown School District
Alton School District
Amherst School District
Andover School District
Ashland School District
Auburn School District
Barnstead School District
Barrington School District
Bartlett School District
Bath School District
Bedford School District
Benton School District
Berlin School District
Bethlehem School District
Bow School District
Brentwood School District
Brookline School District
Campton School District
Candia School District
Chatham School District
Chester School District
Chesterfield School District
Chichester School District
Claremont School District
Clarksville School District
Colebrook School District
Columbia School District
Concord School District
Contoocook Valley School District
Conway School District
Cornish School District
Croydon School District
Deerfield School District
Derry School District
Dover School District
Dresden School District
Dummer School District
Dunbarton School District
East Kingston School District
Eaton School District
Elsworth School District
Epping School District
Epsom School District
Errol School District
Exeter Elementary School District
Exeter Regional Cooperative School District
Fall Mountain Regional School District
Farmington School District
Franklin School District
Freedom School District
Fremont School District
Gilford School District
Gilmanton School District
Goffstown School District
Gorham School District
Goshen Lempster Cooperative School District
Governor Wentworth Regional School District
Grantham School District
Greenland School District
Hampstead School District
Hampton Falls School District
Hampton School District
Hanover School District
Harrisville School District
Hart'S Location School District
Haverhill Cooperative School District
Henniker School District
Hill School District
Hillsboro-Deering Cooperative School
Hinsdale School District
Holderness School District
Hollis School District
Hollis/Brookline Cooperative School
Hooksett School District
Hopkinton School District
Hudson School District
Inter Lakes School District
Jackson School District
Jaffrey-Rindge Cooperative School District
John Stark Regional
Kearsarge Regional School District
Keene School District
Kensington School District
Laconia School District
Lafayette Regional School District
Landaff School District
Lebanon School District
Lincoln-Woodstock School District
Lisbon Regional School District
Litchfield School District
Littleton School District
Londonderry School District
Lyme School District
Lyndeborough School District
Madison School District
Manchester School District
Marlborough School District
Marlow School District
Mascenic Regional School District
Mascoma Valley Regional School District
Merrimack School District
Merrimack Valley School District
Middleton School District
Milan School District
Milford School District
Milton School District
Monadnock Regional School District
Monroe School District
Mont Vernon School District
Moultonborough School District
Nashua School District
Nelson School District
New Boston School District
New Castle School District
Newfields School District
Newfound Area School District
Newington School District
Newmarket School District
Newport School District
North Hampton School District
Northumberland School District
Northwood School District
Nottingham School District
Oyster River Cooperative School District
Pelham School District
Pembroke School District
Pemi-Baker Regional School District
Piermont School District
Pittsburg School District
Pittsfield School District
Plainfield School District
Plymouth School District
Portsmouth School District
Profile School District
Randolph School District
Raymond School District
Rivendell School District
Rochester School District
Rollinsford School District
Rumney School District
Rye School District
Salem School District
Sanborn Regional School District
Seabrook School District
Shaker Regional School District
Shelburne School District
Somersworth School District
Souhegan Cooperative School District
South Hampton School District
Stark School District
Stewartstown School District
Stoddard School District
Strafford School District
Stratford School District
Stratham School District
Sunapee School District
Tamworth School District
Thornton School District
Timberlane Regional School District
Unity School District
Wakefield School District
Warren School District
Washington School District
Waterville Valley School District
Weare School District
Wentworth School District
Westmoreland School District
White Mountain Regional School District
Wilton School District
Wilton-Lyndeboro School District
Winchester School District
Windham School District
Windsor School District
Winnacunnet Cooperative School District
Winnisquam Regional School District

Per-Pupil Expenditure. Statewide per-pupil expenditure equals the total amount of revenue paid out by school systems in the state divided by total school enrollment. It includes funds from federal, state, and local sources and funds spent on day to day operating expenses, such as teacher salaries. It does not include capital expenses, such as school construction.

School Finance Inequity. School finance equity figures presented reflect a definition contained in Title I of the No Child Left Behind Act. That definition examines the differences in per-pupil spending among school districts across a given state. The per-pupil expenditure for every school district is compared to the average per-pupil expenditure for the state and weighted according to size and poverty level.

Indirect Aid. Indirect aid is support provided for school districts through the federal tax code. For example, a community can use local property taxes to finance local schools, and it costs taxpayers less because local property taxes are deductible on federal income tax returns.

Direct Aid. Direct aid is education funding that comes from the federal government and is distributed directly to states and then given to individual school districts. The figures presented here include only the two largest direct aid funding streams -- the Title I program for disadvantaged students and the IDEA special education program for children with disabilities.

Title I. Title I of the No Child Left Behind Act authorizes direct aid from the federal government to states and school districts to support the additional education needs of children from low-income families.

IDEA. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) authorizes direct aid from the federal government to states and school districts to support the additional education needs of children with disabilities.

Impact Aid Basic Support Payments. Title VIII of the No Child Left Behind Act authorizes direct aid from the federal government to school districts that educate large numbers of "federally connected" children or have been impacted by the lost property tax revenue on federal lands (i.e. military bases or Native American reservations).

Student Poverty Rate. The student poverty rate reflects the number of children in a state ages 5 to 17 living beneath the Census Bureau's poverty line. In 2004, the poverty income threshold for a family of four was $19,157.

Free and Reduced Priced Lunch Enrollment Rate. The student poverty rate based on free and reduced price lunch eligibility reflects the number of students in the state who are certified to receive free or reduced price lunches based on their family incomes or participation in Food Stamp or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families programs.

Total School Food Funds. The National School Lunch Act authorizes the distribution of federal funds to states and school districts to provide nutritious lunches, breakfasts and snacks to low income students at free or reduced prices.

Achievement. State-defined proficiency standards of what students should know and be able to do in each grade are developed separately by each state. States use these standards to test and assess whether students are performing adequately, as required under the No Child Left Behind Act.

Nationally-defined proficiency standards of what students should know and be able to do are developed by the National Assessment Governing Board. The Board administers a national test to a representative sample of students-the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)-that measures whether students are performing at grade level.

Percentage figures presented reflect the proportion of students learning at grade level according to state NCLB and national NAEP standards, respectively.


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