What Are The Best US High Schools
What Are The Best US High Schools
What Are The Best US High Schools
Schools? It Depends
Students studying oceanography at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science & Technology in
Virgina.
For example, deciding the 10 best public high schools out of 24,000 in America.
Two publications put together lists of the top 10. But the website Niche.com and the
magazine U.S. News and World Report could agree on only one.
Both named Thomas Jefferson High School for Science & Technology of Fairfax
County, Virginia. Many people call it just Thomas Jefferson.
Niche ranked Thomas Jefferson number four. U.S. News put Thomas Jefferson at
six.
But the two publications could not agree on their other top nine high schools.
The Chicago schools are Walter Payton College Prep, rated Number 1; Northside
College Preparatory High School, Number 2; and Young Magnet High School,
Number 6.
The top ratings for Chicago schools come at a time when violence among young
people remains a problem. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel welcomed the good news
for his city.
Three charter schools in Arizona took the highest positions at U.S. News and World
Report. They are all operated by a private company called BASIS Education Group
LLC. BASIS also operates charter schools in Texas, Louisiana and Washington D.C.
The BASIS school in Scottsdale, Arizona was rated Number 1 nationally, followed by
BASIS Tucson North and BASIS Oro Valley.
U.S. News said it made a change in its ratings this year, giving more weight to high
schools where students take and pass college-level courses and exams. Preparing
high school students for college-level classes and tests is a major part of BASIS
education plan for its students.
Robert Morse worked on the best high school rating system. He said that U.S. News
wanted to give credit to schools that that make an effort to challenge their
students.
How should parents look at school ratings?
Laura Owen is director of the American University School of Educations Center for
Postsecondary Readiness and Success. She said that all schools want to be rated
highly.
But just because a school is ranked highly does not mean it is the best school for
every child, Owen said. Parents have to decide which schools offer the academics and
support that will help their children learn and reach their potential.
Elise Hauptman has two children at Stevenson High School in Illinois, the number-
three rated public high school according to Niche.com.
She said Stevenson does something many schools fail to do: make changes to meet
the needs of current students.
Science students at Stevenson High School in Illinois.
They were among the first in the area to delay the start time of the school day,
acknowledging sleep studies done on teens, Hauptman said. The day starts half an
hour later, but both of my kids said it makes a huge difference.
She also points to the schools willingness to meet the needs of a variety of students
-- not just those with the highest grades. Their efforts include adding new subjects,
such as writing for college, and starting a new club to deal with drug and alcohol
abuse.
Twins Melissa and Ryan Hauptman, 17, in front of Stevenson High School.
How did the publications rank the best high schools?
When considering rankings, U.S. News said it looks at whether a schools students
do better than expected on reading and math tests. U.S. News also says that it looks
at how disadvantaged students, including black and Hispanic students, perform on
tests.
Niche says it bases its ratings on students performance on standardized tests, racial
and economic diversity of the school population, and comments from a schools
students and their parents.
Six of the ten top high schools rated by Niche.com select their students. That means
they can choose the brightest middle and junior high school students for their
schools.
But the BASIS schools in Arizona that scored so high in the U.S. News and World
Report's ratings do not have admission requirements. School officials say they hold
a lottery when they have more students than they can accept.
Kristen Jordison is Head of School at BASIS Scottsdale, which was ranked Number 1
in the latest U.S. News and World Report survey.
She said the school is successful because it has excellent teachers and demands a lot
of students, including college-level assignments.
Teachers and fellow students work with children individually who are struggling
with classes, Jordison said.
She said that BASIS schools in Arizona are open to everyone. But by not offering
transportation and free lunch programs, the schools can be difficult for low-income
parents to send their children to, Amrein-Beardsley said. The result is that BASIS
schools take in fewer minority students and fewer students from poor families than
regular public schools, she said.
Thomas said that every school, public or private, will lose students each year. But he
said that BASIS schools lose a lot more students than other schools because not all
students are ready to take college-level classes.
Bruce Alpert reported on this story for Learning English. Kelly Jean Kelly was the
editor.
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Words in This Story
proud - n. very happy and pleased because of something that was done
principal - n. the leader of a school
challenge - v. to test the ability, skill, or strength of someone
potential - n. a quality that something has that can be developed to make it better
diversity - n. the state of having people who are different races or who have
different cultures in a group
lottery - n. a system used to decide who will get or be given something by choosing
names or numbers by chance