GENERAL INFORMATION

CAMPUS GOALS

  • Mission Statement:

    To graduate all students college, career or military ready.
     

    Vision Statement:

    To make all students and staff better versions of themselves.

VIPS

  • Partnerships with the community are vital in order to strengthen instructional outcomes for all students. We would like you to develop a collaborative relationship with us that will foster long-term student achievement... one that offers opportunities for all students ... making a difference together. For more information, please contact Susan Young.

CLASS RANKING

  • Beginning with courses taken between the eighth and ninth grade, all high school courses, including correspondence, night school, college courses taken for dual credit, credit-by-exam, and summer school, are averaged in the class rank with the exception of student assistance, local credit, and courses taken under the pass/fail option.

    High school courses taken by seventh or eighth-grade students and completed by the end of the eighth-grade year will not count in class rank with the exceptions of Geometry, Biology, and the third or higher levels of a foreign language. Rank will be determined by grade point averages (G.P.A.) of the students. G.P.A. and class rank are calculated in the fall after students complete the ninth and tenth grades. Estimated class rankings are determined at the end of the junior year and the first semester of the senior year for the express purpose of college entrance requirements. Another ranking is performed at the end of the fifth grading period to identify summa cum laude, magna cum laude, and cum laude graduates. No valedictorian or salutatorian will be officially recognized at graduation.

HONOR GRADUATE DESIGNATION

  • At graduation ceremonies, graduates will be recognized in the following categories: summa cum laude (6.5 G.P.A.), magna cum laude (6.25 G.P.A.), and cum laude (6.0 G.P.A.). A final calculation of G.P.A. and class rank is determined at the end of the senior year and will be reflected on the final transcript which is sent to colleges.

    GRADING SCALE

    CFISD uses a weighted 6.0 grading scale.  Grade points are allocated for a course of study based on the designation of the course as indicated in the chart below.

    GRADE

    LEVEL OR COURSE

    K, AP, and
    HORIZONS Levels

    L-Level
    (on level)

    Below Level
    Adaptive Behavior,
    ICS-M, NAC, Resource

    Life Skills

    90-100

    7 grade points

    6 grade points

    5 grade points

    4 grade points

    80-89

    6 grade points

    5 grade points

    4 grade points

    3 grade points

    75-79

    5 grade points

    4 grade points

    3 grade points

    2 grade points

    70-74

    4 grade points

    3 grade points

    2 grade points

    1 grade points

    Below 70

    0 grade points

    0 grade points

    0 grade points

    0 grade points

    The semester grades are computed by allocating a weight of 3/7 for each grading period average and 1/7 for a semester exam. A student will receive credit for each semester passed.  If the course is a two-semester sequence and the student passes the second semester after having failed the first, he/she may receive the credit for both semesters if the yearly average is passing (70+).

    Four mathematics and four science courses will be included in a student’s GPA calculation.  If a student takes Algebra I in 8th-grade and takes four math courses in grades 9-12, the four math courses taken in high school will be included in the student’s GPA. But, if a student takes Algebra I in 8th-grade and only takes three math courses in grades 9-12, the Algebra I course will be included in the student’s GPA calculation. Algebra I taken at any time will carry L-level grade points.