https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/national-rankings
These awards do get get bandied about in press releases and sites like greatschools.org. They don't mean anything, but I suppose it's fun to see where your old high school is at.
Disclaimer: I work for a school listed in the report. So don't take anything I say on face value I guess.
The U.S. News rankings include data on more than 22,000 public high schools in 50 states and the District of Columbia. Schools were awarded gold, silver or bronze medals based on their performance on state assessments and how well they prepare students for college.
STEP 1 | Students perform better than expected in their state.
We looked at reading and math results for students on each state's proficiency tests and then factored in the percentage of economically disadvantaged students, who tend to score lower.
STEP 2 | Disadvantaged students perform better than state average.
We compared each school's math and reading proficiency rates for disadvantaged students - black, Hispanic and low-income - with the statewide results for these student groups and then selected schools that were performing better than their state averages.
STEP 3 | Student graduation rates meet or exceed a national standard
We excluded schools from consideration if their graduation rates were lower than 75 percent - a threshold that is higher than a federal law that requires states to give extra resources to schools below 67 percent.
STEP 4 | Students are prepared for college-level coursework.
We calculated a College Readiness Index, which is based on the school's AP participation rate and how well the students did on those tests. Tiebeakers were used to determine ranks of schools that achieved the same College Readiness Index.
These awards do get get bandied about in press releases and sites like greatschools.org. They don't mean anything, but I suppose it's fun to see where your old high school is at.
Disclaimer: I work for a school listed in the report. So don't take anything I say on face value I guess.