Florida districts celebrate strong grades |
Florida’s latest A-to-F school grades showed broad academic gains, with 76% of public schools earning A or B grades, up from 71%, while D and F schools declined. Broward County, Palm Beach County and Miami-Dade County all retained A grades, with Broward and Palm Beach doing so for the third consecutive year and Miami-Dade continuing its strong record since 2018, outside the pandemic years. Broward had no D or F schools for a second straight year, while Miami-Dade and Palm Beach each reported isolated low-performing schools. Leon County earned a B, narrowly missing an A, but highlighted major improvements at Sealey Elementary and Fairview Middle. Jefferson and Franklin County Schools improved to B grades, while Wakulla, Liberty and Lafayette maintained A grades. Alachua County also retained a B, with 16 A-rated schools, though Rawlings Elementary fell to an F. Duval County kept its districtwide A, with 98% of traditional schools earning A, B or C grades. Escambia County earned its first A grade, helped by gains in math and major school-level improvements. Lake County secured another A rating, Sumter County maintained its A, and Palm Beach reported stronger reading, math, science and acceleration results. Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas said Florida’s results show that “high expectations, expanded school choice and strong accountability produce real results for students.”