Definition: Almanac
“A publication
containing statistical, tabular, and general information…often
including a miscellany of other information.”
Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, p.24

To many of us, almanacs remain an integral, if not
dusty, part of our bookcase landscape, despite the plethora
of information sources bombarding us each and every day.
As
an avid baseball fan, the almanac was my quintessential source for
statistics on Willie, Mickey, and the Duke, particularly around World
Series time. The Almanac was also the official source for settling any
and all dinner-time disputes regarding questions on geography,
history, entertainment, science, and just about anything that was
assigned a number, had a date, was a record, or existed in time and
space at one time.
The
most satisfying ingredient of an almanac, however, remains its
constancy in a world of change. It is a collection of data about
topics, some of continuing interest, most of cursory interest. But it
is the collection itself, and its presence, that gives solace to some
of us that these data are gathered in one place, each year, containing
data of previous years and, now, provides the new data for the current
year.
The
School District Almanac for 2005 represents our continuing effort
to collect and codify many unconnected data sources about our state
and county
school districts. Originally, this book focused only on financial
data. We thought there should be more, particularly when all of these
data are already available at various websites.
The
Almanac reflects an established database for each school district over several years, one which we hope will grow in
depth and breadth each year. We have also linked these financial,
student, personnel, achievement, and Census data information into a
state-wide school district database, which can be explored with
geographic, statistical, and presentation graphics software.
A
caveat or two: Some of these data are self-reported, some data are
only as current as the most recent comptrollers audit, and some may be
just reported wrong. We will strive to continually edit and improve
these data with your help because, despite these inevitable
weaknesses, the almanac should continue to be a place where we can
measure change and understand its consequences, each and every year,
thanks to the efforts of non-profit school study councils like SCOPE.
We
hope you agree.
Jonathan T.
Hughes, Ph.D.
Database Author
