Schools

NJ's Best School Districts: South Brunswick Top 12 In Niche Ranking

The school district was ranked No. 1 in Middlesex County and the high school also topped Niche's recent list as well

(Alex Mirchuk/Patch)

SOUTH BRUNSWICK, NJ — The South Brunswick School District has once again topped the list of best school districts in the state. Twenty-four New Jersey school systems earned an A-plus in the education platform Niche’s 2023 Best Schools and Districts rankings released earlier this week.

South Brunswick Schools was ranked No. 12 in the state, behind neighbors Princeton Public Schools (3rd) and West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District (4th). The school district was ranked No. 1 in Middlesex County.

Niche ranked 11,820 school districts nationwide. The rankings differ from others that rely almost exclusively on test scores and academic performance in that it also includes input from students, alumni and parents, as well as quantitative data from sources such as the U.S. Department of Education to evaluate teachers, resources and facilities, according to the platform.

Find out what's happening in South Brunswickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Here are New Jersey's highest-ranking districts:

  1. Millburn Township School District
  2. Northern Valley Regional High School District (Demarest)
  3. Princeton Public Schools
  4. West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District
  5. Ridgewood Public School District
  6. Tenafly Public School District
  7. Livingston Board of Education School District
  8. Summit Public School District
  9. Pascack Valley Regional High School District (Montvale)
  10. Mountain Lakes School District
  11. Moorestown Township Public School District
  12. South Brunswick School District
  13. Bernards Township School District
  14. West Essex Regional School District (North Caldwell)
  15. Haddonfield Public Schools
  16. Holmdel Township School District
  17. Westfield Public School District
  18. New Providence School District
  19. Mahwah Township Public School District
  20. Ramapo Indian Hills Regional High School District (Oakland)
  21. The School District of the Chathams
  22. Edison Township School District
  23. Bridgewater-Raritan Regional School District
  24. River Dell Regional School District (River Edge)
  25. Glen Rock Board of Education

Niche gave them all A+ grades, except for Glen Rock, which received an A.

Find out what's happening in South Brunswickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

High School Ranking

Niche also ranked 92,743 public schools and 30,112 private schools in the 2023 report. South Brunswick High School was ranked 29th in the state among the best public high schools list released by Niche. More: NJ's 'Best' High Schools: New Rankings Released

But high school rankings have their critics. In 2013, journalist and former professor and The Atlantic writer John Tierney argued that high school rankings are "nonsense."

"Parents might be able to use that information to find an affordable residence near good schools, while still leaving themselves within reasonable reach of their place of employment," Tierney wrote. "It's harder to fathom the logic for ranking high schools nationwide. Few are the families who will move out of state or across the country on the basis of claims about school quality."

South Brunswick Gets An A+

The school district received an overall grade of A+. It received an A+ for academics, teacher, college prep and sports; A- for food; A for club activities and administration; B+ for diversity and B- for resource and facilities.

The platform said its rankings were created to provide families with valuable information — both quantitative and qualitative — on schools in their area or in a neighborhood they’re not familiar with yet.

"We strive to put as much power in their hands as possible so they can make informed decisions with confidence," Skurman said in a statement. "Our 2023 rankings surface key insights and data points for parents everywhere to use in their school search. We’re honored that millions of families consider us a reliable resource during such a pivotal moment in their lives."

School ratings have the power to drive segregation, contends Jack Schneider, an associate professor of education at the University of Massachusetts Lowell.

"There’s evidence that this is already happening via websites like GreatSchools.org and Niche.com," Schneider wrote last October for WBUR.

Find out more about the rankings and methodology here.

(With reporting from Josh Bakan, Patch Staff)

Have a correction or news tip? Email sarah.salvadore@patch.com

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