Mahadev Maitri Foundation
US Initiatives
Elementary Schools

Best Elementary Schools
in HENDRY

This page covers 6 of the 7 elementary schools in HENDRY had enough federal data to rank. Rankings use a composite of neighborhood opportunity, class sizes, and per-student investment — signals available consistently from federal data across all US public schools. Schools in this district score below the national median on neighborhood opportunity. Use these rankings as a starting point; pair them with school visits and conversations with local parents before making any enrollment decision.

6
Schools Ranked
Florida
State
None
Charter Schools
RankingsHow We RankFAQAbout Data

Elementary Schools Rankings

Showing 6 of 6
1
rank
WESTSIDE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Grades PK–05469 students
Scores consistently across all ranking signals
40
/100
Student:Teacher
16.8:1
Near nat'l 15.4:1
Per-Pupil Spend
$8,335
Below nat'l avg
Free Lunch
78%
High economic need
2
rank
LABELLE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Grades PK–05437 students
Scores consistently across all ranking signals
39
/100
Student:Teacher
16.0:1
Near nat'l 15.4:1
Opportunity
36/100
Below nat'l median
Per-Pupil Spend
$8,335
Below nat'l avg
Free Lunch
77%
High economic need
3
rank
CENTRAL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Grades PK–05588 students
Scores consistently across all ranking signals
38
/100
Student:Teacher
17.8:1
Near nat'l 15.4:1
Per-Pupil Spend
$8,335
Below nat'l avg
Free Lunch
76%
High economic need
4
rank
EDWARD A. UPTHEGROVE ELEMENTARY
Grades PK–05541 students
Scores consistently across all ranking signals
37
/100
Student:Teacher
18.7:1
Near nat'l 15.4:1
Opportunity
36/100
Below nat'l median
Per-Pupil Spend
$8,335
Below nat'l avg
Free Lunch
76%
High economic need
5
rank
COUNTRY OAKS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Grades PK–05893 students
Scores consistently across all ranking signals
35
/100
Student:Teacher
20.3:1
Near nat'l 15.4:1
Opportunity
36/100
Below nat'l median
Per-Pupil Spend
$8,335
Below nat'l avg
Free Lunch
75%
High economic need
6
rank
EASTSIDE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Grades PK–05503 students
Scores consistently across all ranking signals
30
/100
Student:Teacher
21.9:1
Near nat'l 15.4:1
Per-Pupil Spend
$8,335
Below nat'l avg
Free Lunch
84%
High economic need
How We Rank Elementary Schools

Each school receives a composite score (0–100) built from 4 federal data signals, weighted to reflect what matters most at the elementary school level. All signals are normalised against national benchmarks so a school's score reflects its standing across the entire US, not just within this district.

Neighborhood Opportunity
40%
Harvard Opportunity Atlas score for the school's neighbourhood. Higher means children from this area historically achieve stronger economic outcomes.
Student-Teacher Ratio
30%
Lower ratio = smaller classes = more individual attention per child. Normalised against national range.
Per-Pupil Expenditure
20%
Annual district spending per enrolled student from the NCES F-33 Finance Survey. Compared against national average.
Free Lunch Rate
10%
Percentage of students qualifying for free/reduced-price lunch. Used as a neighbourhood economic-context signal.
Test scores are excluded: they are not published as consistent open federal data across all states, making reliable cross-district comparison impossible with this signal alone.
District at a Glance
6
Elementary Schools
15
Total Schools
40
#1 Score
37
Avg Score
District profileHENDRY
Top Ranked Elementary School
Compare HENDRY with neighbouring districts
⇄ Compare districts
Frequently Asked Questions
About This Data

All figures on this page come directly from US federal open datasets: NCES Common Core of Data (enrollment, school characteristics, student-teacher ratios), NCES F-33 Finance Survey (per-pupil expenditure), Harvard Opportunity Atlas (neighbourhood opportunity scores). Federal data is published on an annual cycle and may not reflect the very latest school-year changes. Rankings reflect available data and should be used as a starting point — not a substitute for visiting schools or consulting district resources directly. What this ranking does not measure: teacher quality, classroom culture, extracurricular programmes, school safety, or parent and student satisfaction.