It’s the 12 Days of Ballotpedia! Your gift powers the trusted, unbiased information voters need heading into 2026. Donate now!

Orofino Joint School District, Idaho

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Orofino Joint School District
School Board badge.png
District details
School board members: 5
Students: 1,098 (2023-2024)
Schools: 8 (2023-2024)
Website: Link

Orofino Joint School District is a school district in Idaho (Nez Perce, Clearwater, and Lewis counties). During the 2024 school year, 1,098 students attended one of the district's eight schools.

This page provides information regarding school board members, finances, academics, students, and more details about the district.

School board

The Orofino Joint School District consists of five members serving four-year terms. To find information about school board meetings, click here.

List of school board members
NameYear assumed officeYear term ends
C. Brian Craig
Jesse Daniels
Teresa Koepke
Taylor McIntosh
Chris St. Germaine

Elections

Click here for more information about any school board elections that Ballotpedia has covered in this district.

Join the conversation about school board politics

Hall Pass

Stay up to date on school board politics!

Subscribe for a weekly roundup of the sharpest commentary and research from across the political spectrum with Ballotpedia's Hall Pass newsletter.



District map

Budget

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[1]

Revenue, 2021-2022
SOURCE AMOUNT AMOUNT PER STUDENT PERCENT
Federal: $2,970,000 $2,831 17%
Local: $4,099,000 $3,908 23%
State: $10,438,000 $9,950 60%
Total: $17,507,000 $16,689
Expenditures, 2021-2022
TYPE AMOUNT AMOUNT PER STUDENT PERCENT
Total Expenditures: $16,116,000 $15,363
Total Current Expenditures: $15,602,000 $14,873
Instructional Expenditures: $9,391,000 $8,952 58%
Student and Staff Support: $2,298,000 $2,190 14%
Administration: $1,517,000 $1,446 9%
Operations, Food Service, Other: $2,396,000 $2,284 15%
Total Capital Outlay: $504,000 $480
Construction: $67,000 $63
Total Non El-Sec Education & Other: $0 $0
Interest on Debt: $10,000 $9


Academic performance

Each year, state and local education agencies use tests and other standards to assess student proficiency. Although the data below was published by the U.S. Department of Education, proficiency measurements are established by the states. As a result, proficiency levels are not comparable between different states and year-over-year proficiency levels within a district may not be comparable because states may change their proficiency measurements. To protect student privacy, percentages are reported as ranges for groups of 300 students or fewer. If five or fewer students were included in a data set, the data will display as "PS."[2]

The following table shows the percentage of district students who scored at or above the proficiency level each school year:

School year All (%) Asian/Pacific Islander (%) Black (%) Hispanic (%) Native American (%) Two or More Races (%) White (%)
2021-2022 36 PS PS 20-29 <50 <50 36
2020-2021 37 PS PS 21-39 <50 <50 38
2018-2019 41 PS PS <=20 40-59 <50 43
2017-2018 42 PS <50 <=20 40-59 <50 44
2016-2017 41 >=50 <50 PS 40-59 <50 41
2015-2016 37 >=50 <50 20-29 <50 <50 38
2014-2015 31 <50 <50 20-29 >=50 <50 30
2013-2014 >=50 PS PS PS >=50
2012-2013 73 >=50 >=50 60-69 >=50 <50 74
2011-2012 70 >=80 >=50 50-59 PS >=50 72
2010-2011 73 >=50 PS 60-79 >=50 >=50 74

The following table shows the percentage of district students who scored at or above the proficiency level each school year:

School year All (%) Asian/Pacific Islander (%) Black (%) Hispanic (%) Native American (%) Two or More Races (%) White (%)
2021-2022 53 PS PS 40-49 <50 <50 55
2020-2021 56 PS PS 40-59 >=50 >=50 56
2018-2019 53 PS PS 21-39 40-59 <50 53
2017-2018 52 PS >=50 21-39 40-59 <50 54
2016-2017 52 >=50 <50 PS 40-59 >=50 52
2015-2016 50 >=50 <50 40-49 <50 <50 50
2014-2015 44 >=50 <50 20-29 >=50 <50 44
2013-2014 >=50 PS PS PS >=50
2012-2013 91 >=50 >=50 >=90 >=50 >=50 91
2011-2012 89 >=80 >=50 >=80 PS >=50 90
2010-2011 88 >=50 PS >=80 >=50 >=50 90

The following table shows the graduation rate of district students each school year:

School year All (%) Asian/Pacific Islander (%) Black (%) Hispanic (%) Native American (%) Two or More Races (%) White (%)
2021-2022 50-54 PS PS <50 PS PS 55-59
2020-2021 45-49 PS PS <50 PS PS 50-54
2019-2020 50-54 PS PS 21-39 <50 55-59
2018-2019 55-59 PS PS <=20 >=50 PS 60-64
2017-2018 50-54 PS PS 21-39 <50 PS 55-59
2016-2017 45-49 PS PS <=20 <50 PS 55-59
2015-2016 55-59 PS PS <50 <50 PS 55-59
2014-2015 65-69 PS <50 >=50 PS 70-74
2013-2014 60-64 PS PS PS PS >=50 60-64


Students

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[3]

Year Enrollment Year-to-year change (%)
2023-2024 1,098 -3.0
2022-2023 1,131 7.3
2021-2022 1,049 3.1
2020-2021 1,017 -11.0
2019-2020 1,129 -3.7
2018-2019 1,171 3.0
2017-2018 1,136 0.8
2016-2017 1,127 5.3
2015-2016 1,067 -2.5
2014-2015 1,094 6.5
2013-2014 1,023 2.2
2012-2013 1,000 5.0
2011-2012 950 -14.6
2010-2011 1,089 -4.5
2009-2010 1,138 -7.3
2008-2009 1,221 -3.6
2007-2008 1,265 -3.0
2006-2007 1,303 -5.1
2005-2006 1,370 -0.5
2004-2005 1,377 -0.9
2003-2004 1,390 -1.7
2002-2003 1,414 -0.4
2001-2002 1,419 -2.3
2000-2001 1,452 -8.1
1999-2000 1,570 0.0
Racial Demographics, 2023-2024
RACE Orofino Joint School District (%) Idaho K-12 STUDENTS (%)
American Indian/Alaska Native 2.0 1.0
Asian or Asian/Pacific Islander 0.4 1.1
Black 0.1 1.2
Hispanic 7.7 19.9
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0.2 0.3
Two or More Races 2.6 3.4
White 87.1 73.1

Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.


Staff

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[4]

As of the 2023-2024 school year, Orofino Joint School District had 77.98 full-time classroom teachers. The student-teacher ratio was 14.08.

Teachers, 2023-2024 school year
TYPE NUMBER OF TEACHERS
Prekindergarten: 0.00
Kindergarten: 3.31
Elementary: 34.53
Secondary: 40.14
Total: 77.98

Orofino Joint School District employed 1.00 district administrators and 6.00 school administrators as of the 2023-2024 school year.

Administrators, 2023-2024 school year
TYPE NUMBER OF ADMINISTRATORS
District Administrators: 1.00
District Administrative Support: 4.39
School Administrators: 6.00
School Administrative Support: 4.64
Other staff, 2023-2024 school year
TYPE NUMBER OF OTHER STAFF
Instructional Aides: 26.23
Instruc. Coordinators & Supervisors: 2.00
Total Guidance Counselors: 0.25
Elementary Guidance Counselors: 0.00
Secondary Guidance Counselors: 0.00
Librarians/Media Specialists: 0.00
Library/Media Support: 1.24
Student Support Services: 4.00
Other Support Services: 23.92


Schools

The following statistics were published by the National Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Education.[5]

The Orofino Joint School District operates eight schools. They are listed below in alphabetical order.
List of schools
SCHOOL NAMENUMBER OF STUDENTSGRADES
Cavendish-Teakean Elementary School24PK-6
Idaho Youth Challenge Academy Fall1269-12
Idaho Youth Challenge Academy Spring09-12
Orofino Elementary School343PK-6
Orofino High School3507-12
Peck Elementary School37PK-6
Timberline Elementary105PK-5
Timberline High School1136-12

About school boards

Education legislation in Idaho

Bills are monitored by BillTrack50 and sorted by action history.

See also

School Boards Education Policy Local Politics Idaho
School Board badge.png
Education Policy Icon.png
Local Politics Image.jpg
Seal of Idaho.png

External links

  • Office website
  • Search Google News for this topic
  • Footnotes