In A Different Class

The nation's most elite public high schools fall outside the NEWSWEEK list.

 

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NEWSWEEK's Challenge Index is designed to recognize schools that challenge average students. These top-performing schools, listed below in alphabetical order, were excluded from the list of top high schools because, despite their exceptional quality, their sky-high SAT and ACT scores indicate they have few or no average students.

Bergen County Academies, Hackensack, N.J.: A collection of seven career-focused academies where students have an extended school day.

Bronx High School of Science, New York: One of the most famous schools in America for many years. It has a richly talented, ethnically diverse student body.

Gatton Academy of Math and Science, Bowling Green, Ky.: Juniors and seniors from all over the state are selected by scores, grades and essays to live in their own Western Kentucky University residence hall, earning college credit as well as completing high school.

High Technology High, Lincroft, N.J.: The highest-scoring of the growing number of schools with this name across the country. This is a new species of high school, with a great emphasis on modern equipment and hands-on learning.

Hunter College High School, New York: Another one of the city's greats, with a seventh- through 12th-grade program administered by Hunter College. It was an all-girls school until it went coed in 1972.

IllinoisMathematics and Science Academy, Aurora: "Wayne's World," the Mike Myers "Saturday Night Live" sketch and film, is not the only cool thing associated with Aurora. IMSA is also a state-funded boarding school. It takes 10th through 12th graders and has a strong mentoring program.

International Community School, Kirkland, Wash.: Students are selected through a lottery to attend this school, which focuses on international awareness. It is one of the few public elite schools without a selective admissions systems. Instead, as happens sometimes, the lottery participants self-select into an academic powerhouse.

Maggie L. Walker Governor's School for Government and International Studies, Richmond, Va.: Unlike the science-math orientation of most of the public elites, the focus of this school is on world cultures and building students' leadership skills.

North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, Durham: This school, established in 1980 in an abandoned hospital, started the small but interesting trend of state-created boarding schools drawing bright and ambitious high-schoolers from all over the state.

Oklahoma School of Science and Mathematics, Oklahoma City: A state-funded boarding school that teaches all courses at the university level.

South Carolina Governor's School for Science and Mathematics, Hartsville: Another state boarding school, this one is for 11th and 12th graders across the state.

Stuyvesant High School, New York: Along with Bronx Science, probably the most famous on this list. It has been teaching the city's most academically ambitious students for several generations. It offers about 55 AP courses every semester, and has plenty of courses above that level.

Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Fairfax County, Va.: The most selective public high school in America, drawing mostly from the affluent households of northern Virginia and with one of the most talented faculties in the area.

Union County Magnet High School, Scotch Plains, N.J.: This selective-admission school also focuses on science, math and technology.

University Laboratory High School, Urbana, Ill.: There is competitive admission for this day school on the campus of the University of Illinois. It makes good use of its higher-education environment.

Whitney High School, Cerritos, Calif.: Like Jefferson and High Tech High, a suburban version of the New York superschools, with very competitive admission, but unlike students at the state boarding schools, those at Whitney go home at night.

© 2009

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  • Posted By: mom from hawaii @ 06/10/2009 5:11:57 AM

    I live in hawaii also and none of Hawaii public schools would be evened considered for this list. Okay maybe if the topic was uneducated, stupid and apathetic we would come in first. Or if you want to learn to make straw hats or crystal ice this is the place to come. The mentality here for education is low on th elist of priorities. The private schools are good but at a cost and the alot of the kids are snobs with elitist attitudes or Asians that are very pushy and competitive.with parents that are the same . I am moving due to the mentality of this state and its public school education stinks.I had a private school teacher tell me in my daughters 3rd grade childs class, don't worry about his spelling they have spellcheck. Give me a break. The schools look like concentration camps and pathetic. Its total chaos. The support of the community is pathetic, alot of parents are just as uneducated and really do not care what happens to kids and education. I call it Paradise Ghetto mentality. People here just want to buy tattos and big gold bracelets and live off welfare. Thats it. They call it the Aloha state but there is alot of Racism here and its no surprise President Obama never came back to work here. i will say its very beautiful here and the weather is close to perfect but local mentality is to grumble when its still really nice. THey just don't know ow good they have it..

  • Posted By: WaikikiSteve @ 06/10/2009 2:50:42 AM

    We live in Hawaii, where the President is from. Why was our state not considered part of the United States?

  • Posted By: siemens @ 06/09/2009 8:12:35 PM

    This is the second year that TAMS (texas academy of mathematics and science) has been missing . . has the list gotten smaller?

    Seeing as how the University of North Texas is a college and all TAMS classes are actual college courses . . I can't see a reason why it was taken off of the list.

    This also means that all of the faculty has doctoral degrees . . . seeing as how the classes are actual university courses.

    Not to mention the requirement for an entrance exam and SAT scores prior to 10th grade being required for admittance.

    At the school among other things a cumulative GPA of above a 3.0 (college 4.0 scale) must be maintained.

    All students must also complete calculus 2 prior to graduation and most proceed far beyond past linear algebra and number theory courses while in their 12th grade year.

    Oh and also since newsweek seems to praise Thomas Jeffersons Westinghouse and goldwater research scholars

    maybe they should research the winner . . . this past year

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/DN-national_09met.ART.State.Edition2.4a68f5f.html

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