Schools
Here's How Gloucester Township Schools Were Ranked By US News
US News & World Report released its annual list of best high schools in the country. See where the Gloucester Township schools ranked.
GLOUCESTER TOWNSHIP, NJ - US News & World Report's released its 2019 rankings of best high schools in the country this week. The publication ranked the state's top 350 and showed where they landed among more than 20,500 public high schools in the United States.
The Camden County Technical School's Gloucester Township Campus is ranked No. 6,689 in the country, and No. 215 in New Jersey.
Timber Creek Regional High School is ranked No. 10,315 in the country, and No. 299 in New Jersey.
Find out what's happening in Gloucester Townshipfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Triton Regional High School is ranked No. 10,775 in the country, and No. 308 in New Jersey.
Highland Regional High School is ranked No. 11,029 in the country, and No. 315 in New Jersey.
Find out what's happening in Gloucester Townshipfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
U.S. News & World Report, which released its 2019 best high school rankings on Tuesday, is the gold standard for education rankings and is widely considered the global authority. Anita Narayan, managing editor of education at US News, said the aim of the rankings is to give families more information about the schools in their district.
The factors considered in compiling the list include college readiness; reading and math proficiency; reading and math performance; underserved student performance; college curriculum breadth; and graduation rates. College readiness measures participation and performance on advanced placement and international baccalaureate exams.
The data also take into account school enrollment, student diversity, participation in free and reduced-price meal programs, graduation rates and the results of state assessment tests. U.S. News worked with the global research firm RTI International to rank the schools.
"We enhanced the methodology to provide an even more comprehensive ranking that is easier to understand and, therefore, more useful to parents and educators," Robert Morse, chief data strategist at U.S. News, said in a news release. "Now, each school's score correlates to its national percentile — a school with a score of 70 is in the 70th percentile and ranks higher than 70 percent of schools. Going forward, this methodology will allow for intuitive comparisons of a school's performance year after year."
To see how all of New Jersey’s high schools fared in the rankings, click here.
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