Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Newsweek's Best Public High Schools in America

Newsweek came out with their list of top ranking high schools in the US, as they have for over ten years. Spoiler alert: Mt. Lebanon didn't make the cut, but neither did Upper St. Clair.

These are challenging times for secondary education. Cash-strapped school districts are cutting back; No Child Left Behind mandates test results; parents and students stress unabated. NEWSWEEK, which has been ranking the top public high schools in America for more than a decade, revamped its methodology this year in hopes of highlighting solutions. We enlisted a panel of experts—Wendy Kopp of Teach For America, Tom Vander Ark of Open Education Solutions (formerly executive director for education at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation), and Linda Darling-Hammond, Stanford professor of education and founder of the School Redesign Network—to develop a yardstick that fully reflects a school’s success turning out college-ready (and life-ready) students. To this end, each school’s score is comprised of six components: graduation rate (25%), college matriculation rate (25%), AP tests taken per graduate (25%), average SAT/ACT scores (10%), average AP/IB/AICE scores (10%), and AP courses offered (5%). (For more information on how these rankings were tabulated, see our Full Methodology.)

Read more: Newsweek's America's Best High Schools 2011 to see which Pittsburgh Schools made the list.

3 comments:

Matt C. Wilson said...

Spoilers:

Hampton and North Allegheny

No Quaker Valley?

Anonymous said...

Good News, Bad News
First the somewhat good news!
In The Almanac today "Area schools among nation's elite." In the Washington Post's High School Challenge: USC, MTL and S. Fayette were included in rankings. MTL ranks 1,455 nationally and 22nd in state although USC is 364 nationally and third in PA.
Now for the bad news. Of the three MTL has he highest millage rate and cost per student!
- Giffen Good

Anonymous said...

News Flash: Good, Bad?
Its reported this morning in PG South Fauyette just voted to raise school district tax to 27.833 mills, surpassing MTLs rate.
Probably indicates next year we'll be seeing a substantial rate increase! After all, a >$95 million high school project likely isn't going to happen now.
-Giffen Good