The Texas Education Agency (TEA) released the 2025 A-F Accountability Ratings for public school systems and campuses across the state Friday, Aug. 15. The delayed 2024 ratings were also made available and Breckenridge ISD received a “B” rating for both years.
The school district had a slight dropoff from its 2024 ratings for 2025, as they scored an 83 for this past year compared to an 85 the year prior. However, Breckenridge High School earned an “A” rating with a 91 score. That is a six point increase from 2024’s rating of 85.
For student achievement, BISD scored an 81 in the 2025 ratings and an 80 in 2024. This rating measures whether students meet expectations on the STAAR test, as well as graduation rate and how prepared students are for success after high school.
The district maintained the same score for school progress with an 84 in both years, which shows how students perform over time and how the district’s performance compares to other districts with similar student populations.
This rating takes the better outcome between academic growth and relative performance. The higher score for 2025 was relative performance, as academic growth was 74. It was similar in 2024, with academic growth garnering a 76 rating.
Finally, for closing the gaps, the school district scored an 80 in 2025 after receiving an 87 in 2024. This shows how well a district is ensuring that all student groups are successful.
East Elementary is the only campus that didn’t receive an individual rating, while the junior high received an 89 overall rating, South Elementary and the high school received an 85 for 2024. In the 2025 ratings, the high school earned an overall rating of 91, an “A,” while the junior high scored an 85 and South Elementary received a 76.
In each individual rating, South Elementary received a 72 rating for student achievement in 2025 and a 76 in 2024. For school progress, the campus scored a 78 in 2025 with the higher rating being academic growth, compared to a 72 for relative performance. South scored a 72 in closing the gaps in 2025 and an 86 in 2024.
The junior high received an 82 for student achievement in 2025 and an 81 in 2024. The better of the two scores for school progress was an 88 in relative performance, compared to an 81 for academic growth. In 2024, academic growth was the better of the two with an 85 compared to 81 in relative performance. BJHS received a 79 rating for closing the gaps in 2025 and a 90 in 2024.
For student achievement, the high school earned an 88 in 2025 and an 83 in 2024. BHS scored just a 65 (D) for academic growth, but a 92 (A) for relative performance to give them a 92 for school progress. They scored an 84 in relative performance for both years.
Most districts across the state were able to maintain their previous year’s rating, with only a small portion – 15% – seeing a decline, and 24% of districts and 31% of campuses improving their letter grade from the 2024 ratings.
To view the 2025 A-F Ratings for school systems and campuses, visit TXschools.gov, and search for the school.
