Colleen DeGuzman/Houston Public Media
Houston ISD leaders say the district will have no F-rated schools when the Texas Education Agency releases its latest accountability ratings later this month – characterizing the feat as a "remarkable transformation" as the district enters its third year under state control.
HISD had 56 failing campuses and another 65 schools with D ratings for the 2022-23 school year, which is the latest set of ratings released by the state agency. That also was the last year before Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath installed Superintendent Mike Miles and replaced the district's elected trustees with a state-appointed board of managers — a move triggered by Wheatley High School’s streak of failing grades from the TEA.
Miles has implemented instructional