Schools
Best NH High Schools 2017: U.S. News and World Report
U.S. News and World Report's 2017 "best high schools" is out and 16 New Hampshire schools made the cut. Did your school make the list?

U.S. News and World Report has crunched the numbers for 2017, releasing its annual list of best high schools in the country, ranking the schools on national and state levels. In New Hampshire, Hollis-Brookline earned the title of the best high school in the state. Sixteen New Hampshire schools made U.S. News' list. U.S. News based the rankings on college preparedness, graduation rates and test scores.
Best Schools In New Hampshire
The top high 10 schools in New Hampshire are as follows:
- Hollis-Brookline High School
- Hopkinton High School
- Windham High School
- Inter-Lakes High School
- Bow High School
- Moultonborough Academy
- Hanover High School
- White Mountains Regional High School
- Bedford High School
- Profile Senior High School
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The top high schools in the country are as follows, according to U.S. News:
- BASIS Scottsdale, Scottsdale, Arizona
- BASIS Tucson North, Tucson, Arizona
- BASIS Oro Valley, Oro Valley, Arizona
- School for the Talented and Gifted, Dallas, Texas
- BASIS Peoria, Peoria, Arizona
- Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, Alexandria, Virginia
- Basis Chandler, Chandler, Arizona
- Carnegie Vanguard High School, Houston, Texas
- School of Science and Engineering, Dallas, Texas
- Pacific Collegiate Charter, Santa Cruz, California
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U.S. News Methodology For Ranking Schools
The 2017 rankings of best high schools identify the top-performing public schools at both the national and the state level and include date on more than 20,000 high schools. To be considered among the best, high schools had to pass a rigorous four-step process that sought to determine whether a school was serving all of its students and not just those who are college bound.
The first step determined whether students at a particular school were performing better than statistically expected for students in that state, factoring in percentages of economically disadvantaged students to identify schools. Schools that passed this step then moved on to step two, which assessed whether disadvantaged students performed at or better than state averages for the least-advantaged students.
For the next two steps, U.S. News looked at graduation rates and college readiness performance. To pass step three, high schools had to have a graduation rate of 75 percent or greater. For the 2017 rankings, the graduation rate reflect students who entered the ninth grade in the 2011-2012 school year. Finally, U.S. News calculated a college readiness index, which was the number of 12th graders who took and passed at least one AP test, divided by the number of 12th graders at that school.
To be ranked numerically nationally, schools had to pass steps 1-3 and have a college readiness index of 20.91 or above.
A total of 6,041 schools were ranked, 500 schools receiving gold medals, 2,109 schools receiving silver medals and the remaining 3,432 schools received bronze medals. Schools that received bronze medals passed the first three steps but were not ranked numerically in the national rankings. The state rankings were based on whether a high school received a gold, silver or a bronze medal and had a CRI value of 10 or higher.
Previously, only gold and silver medal winners were ranked numerically on the state level.
Photo credit: Pixabay
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