America's
Best High Schools
From Massachusetts to California, a look at the schools that excel
in teaching students
Posted November 29, 2007
There are more than 18,000 public high schools in the United States.
What if you could take a snapshot of each one and capture, at a particular
moment, what kinds of students were enrolled there and the caliber of the
education provided them? If you were to collect these individual snapshots into
one huge national yearbook, which high school would be chosen as "Most
Likely to Succeed," meaning that it set the best
example of how to prepare students to achieve their post-graduation goals?

Lunch at Thomas
Jefferson High
School in suburban Washington,
D.C.
(Charlie Archambault for
USN&WR)
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100—Gold Medal Schools
America's
Best High Schools Search
Thomas
Jefferson High School, Va.
Boston
Latin School and MATCH Charter Public High School, Mass.
Hidalgo
High School, Texas
The
Ranking Formula
What
Matters Most in Measuring
Video:
Best High Schools
We've attempted to answer that pivotal question in the following pages, our
first ever ranking of America's
Best High Schools. Using a formula produced in collaboration with School
Evaluation Services, a K-12 data research and analysis business run by Standard
& Poor's, we put high schools in 40 states through
a three-step analysis. First, we measured how each school's students performed
on state tests, adjusting for student circumstances. We next evaluated how well
each school's disadvantaged students did. Finally, we looked at whether the
school was successful in providing college-level coursework.
The 100 schools that did the best in this analysis earned gold
medals. The next 405 schools were awarded silver medals, and an additional
1,086 schools earned bronze.
Like any good photograph, the details of the data gathered for this project
reveal a number of fascinating stories. Most notable is the variety among the
schools that have earned the highest honor. Our first-place winner, Thomas
Jefferson High School in suburban Washington,
D.C., picks its students from the
children of the nation's leaders. Yet just 10 slots lower, Hidalgo
High School on the border of Texas and Mexico has
found success educating a student body comprising the children of challenged
immigrants. And in Boston,
the nation's oldest school carries on an exemplary tradition while a new
charter school explores innovations such as housing tutors in dormitories on
the third floor of its building.
A good high school can open worlds of opportunity for its students.