24 Area High Schools Make Magazine's List

5 Included in Top 100; Some Raise Caveats About Rankings

International Baccalaureate history teacher Richard Peloquin leads an afternoon class at George Mason High School in Falls Church last November. From left are students Jonathan Byers, Tania Andrade and Omar Tanamly.
International Baccalaureate history teacher Richard Peloquin leads an afternoon class at George Mason High School in Falls Church last November. From left are students Jonathan Byers, Tania Andrade and Omar Tanamly. (By James M. Thresher -- The Washington Post)
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By Nick Anderson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, May 19, 2005

Some educators play down or dismiss the rankings. Others tout them. But none disputes the public fascination with lists of top high schools in America, especially when there's a local connection.

Newsweek stirred school circles last week with a cover story on "America's Best High Schools," complete with a list of the top 100. The magazine also posted online the "1,000 Top U.S. Schools," which actually named 1,042.

Seventeen schools from Maryland, Virginia and the District landed on the short list. About 110 made the longer version. Their accomplishment? Pushing a high proportion of students to take classes and tests considered at or near college level.

Newsweek's ranking used a ratio invented by Washington Post education writer Jay Mathews: the number of Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate tests all students take in a given school, divided by the school's number of graduating seniors.

Private schools were excluded for lack of data. So were about 40 elite public schools with admissions criteria deemed too restrictive; Newsweek said it wanted the ranking to measure schools serving students of diverse ability.

Many Post readers are familiar with the ratio, known as the Challenge Index, which has ranked local schools by AP and IB test-taking rates annually since 1998. Periodically, Mathews has teamed with Newsweek researchers for a national version. Their last list was published in 2003, using 2002 data.

The latest list draws on 2004 data from about 11,000 public schools with AP programs and more than 400 that offer IB.

Ten Virginia schools were spotlighted in this year's top 100, led by H-B Woodlawn Secondary Program in Arlington, ranked No. 5. Maryland had six in the top 100, headed by 11th-ranked Richard Montgomery of Rockville, and the District's Banneker placed 46th. Two dozen schools in Fairfax County and Falls Church made the longer list.

The profusion of D.C.-area schools on the list reflects the premium local education officials put on AP and IB access. The College Board, which administers the AP program, found that Maryland and Virginia -- in that order -- led all other states last year in the rate of AP test-taking among high school juniors and seniors. (The District, in comparison with states, was in the middle of the pack.)

Some experts call the Newsweek rankings a useful gauge of access in an educational system that often shuts doors to students not perceived as academic stars. But they also raise numerous caveats.

For example, the rankings give no information about test scores. Nor do they show how much high schools are able to lift achievement from entry to graduation. Social class and the quality of the elementary and middle schools that feed the high schools are hugely significant.

"There's no single measure that can be used that would take into account the complexity of U.S. high schools," said Trevor Packer, executive director of the AP program.


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