Digest of Education Statistics: 2015
Digest of Education Statistics: 2015

NCES 2016-014
December 2016

Appendix A.2. Common Core of Data

The Common Core of Data (CCD) is NCES's primary database on public elementary and secondary education in the United States. It is a comprehensive, annual, national statistical database of all public elementary and secondary schools and school districts containing data designed to be comparable across all states. This database can be used to select samples for other NCES surveys and provide basic information and descriptive statistics on public elementary and secondary schools and schooling in general.

The CCD collects statistical information annually from approximately 100,000 public elementary and secondary schools and approximately 18,000 public school districts (including supervisory unions and regional education service agencies) in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Department of Defense (DoD) dependents schools, the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE), Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Three categories of information are collected in the CCD survey: general descriptive information on schools and school districts; data on students and staff; and fiscal data. The general school and district descriptive information includes name, address, phone number, and type of locale; the data on students and staff include selected demographic characteristics; and the fiscal data pertain to revenues and current expenditures.

The EDFacts data collection system is the primary collection tool for the CCD. NCES works collaboratively with the Department of Education's Performance Information Management Service to develop the CCD collection procedures and data definitions. Coordinators from state education agencies (SEAs) submit the CCD data at different levels (school, agency, and state) to the EDFacts collection system. Prior to submitting CCD files to EDFacts, SEAs must collect and compile information from their respective local education agencies (LEAs) through established administrative records systems within their state or jurisdiction.

Once SEAs have completed their submissions, the CCD survey staff analyzes and verifies the data for quality assurance. Even though the CCD is a universe collection and thus not subject to sampling errors, nonsampling errors can occur. The two potential sources of nonsampling errors are nonresponse and inaccurate reporting. NCES attempts to minimize nonsampling errors through the use of annual training of SEA coordinators, extensive quality reviews, and survey editing procedures. In addition, each year, SEAs are given the opportunity to revise their state-level aggregates from the previous survey cycle.

The CCD survey consists of five components: The Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey, the Local Education Agency (School District) Universe Survey, the State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education, the National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS), and the School District Finance Survey (F-33).

Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey

The Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey includes all public schools providing education services to prekindergarten, kindergarten, grade 1–12, and ungraded students. For school year (SY) 2013–14, the survey included records for each public elementary and secondary school in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, the DoD dependents schools (overseas and domestic), the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE), Puerto Rico, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey includes data for the following variables: NCES school ID number, state school ID number, name of the school, name of the agency that operates the school, mailing address, physical location address, phone number, school type, operational status, locale code, latitude, longitude, county number, county name, full-time-equivalent (FTE) classroom teacher count, low/high grade span offered, congressional district code, school level, students eligible for free lunch, students eligible for reduced-price lunch, total students eligible for free and reduced-price lunch, and student totals and detail (by grade, by race/ethnicity, and by sex). The survey also contains flags indicating whether a school is Title I eligible, schoolwide Title I eligible, a magnet school, a charter school, a shared-time school, or a BIE school, as well as which grades are offered at the school.

Local Education Agency (School District) Universe Survey

The coverage of the Local Education Agency Universe Survey includes all school districts and administrative units providing education services to prekindergarten, kindergarten, grade 1–12, and ungraded students. The Local Education Agency Universe Survey includes records for the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Bureau of Indian Education (BIE), American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the DoD dependents schools (overseas and domestic).

The Local Education Agency Universe Survey includes the following variables: NCES agency ID number, state agency ID number, agency name, phone number, mailing address, physical location address, agency type code, supervisory union number, American National Standards Institute (ANSI) state and county code, county name, core based statistical area (CBSA) code, metropolitan/micropolitan code, metropolitan status code, district locale code, congressional district code, operational status code, BIE agency status, low/high grade span offered, agency charter status, number of schools, number of full-time-equivalent teachers, number of ungraded students, number of PK–12 students, number of special education/Individualized Education Program students, number of English language learner students, instructional staff fields, support staff fields, and LEA charter status.

State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education

The State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education for the 2013–14 school year provides state-level, aggregate information about students and staff in public elementary and secondary education. It includes data from the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and American Samoa. The DoD dependents schools (overseas and domestic) and the BIE are also included in the survey universe. This survey covers public school student membership by grade, race/ethnicity, and state or jurisdiction and covers number of staff in public schools by category and state or jurisdiction. Beginning with the 2006–07 school year, the number of diploma recipients and other high school completers are no longer included in the State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education File. These data are now published in the public-use CCD State Dropout and Completion Data File.

National Public Education Financial Survey

The purpose of the National Public Education Financial Survey (NPEFS) is to provide district, state, and federal policymakers, researchers, and other interested users with descriptive information about revenues and expenditures for public elementary and secondary education. The data collected are useful to (1) chief officers of state education agencies; (2) policymakers in the executive and legislative branches of federal and state governments; (3) education policy and public policy researchers; and (4) the public, journalists, and others.

Data for NPEFS are collected from state education agencies (SEAs) in the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The data file is organized by state or jurisdiction and contains revenue data by funding source; expenditure data by function (the activity being supported by the expenditure) and object (the category of expenditure); average daily attendance data; and total student membership data from the CCD State Nonfiscal Survey of Public Elementary/Secondary Education.

School District Finance Survey

The purpose of the School District Finance Survey (F-33) is to provide finance data for all local education agencies (LEAs) that provide free public elementary and secondary education in the United States. National and state totals are not included (national- and state-level figures are presented, however, in the National Public Education Financial Survey.

NCES partners with the U.S. Census Bureau in the collection of school district finance data. The Census Bureau distributes Census Form F-33, Annual Survey of School System Finances, to all SEAs, and representatives from the SEAs collect and edit data from their LEAs and submit data to the Census Bureau. The Census Bureau then produces two data files: one for distribution and reporting by NCES and the other for distribution and reporting by the Census Bureau. The files include variables for revenues by source, expenditures by function and object, indebtedness, assets, and student membership counts, as well as identification variables.

Teacher Compensation Survey

The Teacher Compensation Survey (TCS) was a research and development effort designed to assess the feasibility of collecting and publishing teacher-level data from the administrative records residing in state education agencies. Twenty-three states participated in the TCS for school year 2008–09. Participating states provided data on salaries, years of teaching experience, highest degree earned, race/ethnicity, and gender for each public school teacher.

The following text table lists the CCD file versions used in the current edition of the Digest of Education Statistics:

Table G. Common Core of Data (CCD) file versions used in the current edition of the Digest of Education Statistics: 1986–87 through 2013–14
 
Year State
Nonfiscal
Survey of
Public
Elementary
and
Secondary
Education
NCES Common
Core of
Data State
Dropout and
Completion
Data
National
Public
Education
Financial
Survey
Local
Education
Agency
Universe
Survey
School
District
Finance
Survey
Public
Elementary/
Secondary
School
Universe
File
1986–87 (FY 1987) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1
1987–88 (FY 1988) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1
1988–89 (FY 1989) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1
1989–90 (FY 1990) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1a–Final1 v.1
1990–91 (FY 1991) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1
1991–92 (FY 1992) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1a–Final1 Revised
1992–93 (FY 1993) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1
1993–94 (FY 1994) v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1 Revised
1994–95 (FY 1995) v.1b v.1b–Revised Revised v.1d–Revised1 Revised
1995–96 (FY 1996) v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1b–Revised1 v.1
1996–97 (FY 1997) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1a–Final1 v.1
1997–98 (FY 1998) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1 v.1e–Revised1 v.1
1998–99 (FY 1999) v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1c v.1c–Revised1 v.1c
1999–2000 (FY 2000) v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1b v.1d–Revised1 v.1b
2000–01 (FY 2001) v.1c v.1b–Revised v.1a v.1d–Revised1 v.1a
2001–02 (FY 2002) v.1c v.1c–Revised v.1a v.1c–Revised1 v.1a
2002–03 (FY 2003) v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1a v.1b–Revised1 v.1a
2003–04 (FY 2004) v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1b v.1b–Revised1 v.1a
2004–05 (FY 2005) v.1f v.1b–Revised v.1c v.1c–Revised1 v.1b
2005–06 (FY 2006) v.1b v.1b v.1b–Revised v.1a v.1a–Final1 v.1a
2006–07 (FY 2007) v.1c v.1a v.1b–Revised v.1c v.1a–Final1 v.1c
2007–08 (FY 2008) v.1b v.1a v.1a–Final v.1b v.1a–Final1 v.1b
2008–09 (FY 2009) v.1c v.1a v.1b–Revised v.1a v.1a–Final1 v.1b
2009–10 (FY 2010) v.1b v.1a v.1a– Provisional v.2a v.1a–Provisional1 v.2a
2010–11 (FY 2011) v.1a v.1a–Provisional1 v.1a–Preliminary v.2a v.1a–Provisional1 v.2a
2011–12 (FY 2012) v.1a v.1a–Preliminary v.1a–Provisional v.1a v.1a–Provisional v.1a
2012–13 (FY 2013) v.1a v.1a–Provisional v.1a v.1a–Provisional v.1a
2013–14 (FY 2014) v.1a v.1a v.1a
—Not available.
†Not applicable. Survey not conducted.
1 Data not used in current edition of Digest of Education Statistics.
NOTE: Preliminary data have been edited but are subject to further NCES quality control procedures. Provisional data have undergone all NCES data quality control procedures. NCES releases a final data file after a publication using provisional data has been released. If NCES receives revised data from states or discovers errors in the final data file, a revised data file is released.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), retrieved May 10, 2016, from http://nces.ed.gov/ccd/ccddata.asp. (This table was prepared May 2016.)

Further information on the nonfiscal CCD data may be obtained from

Patrick Keaton
Administrative Data Division
Elementary and Secondary Branch
National Center for Education Statistics
550 12th Street SW
Washington, DC 20202
patrick.keaton@ed.gov
http://nces.ed.gov/ccd

Further information on the fiscal CCD data may be obtained from

Stephen Cornman
Administrative Data Division
Elementary and Secondary Branch
National Center for Education Statistics
550 12th Street, SW
Washington DC 20202
stephen.cornman@ed.gov
http://nces.ed.gov/ccd