Albuquerque Journal

U.S. News ranks best high schools in New Mexico

28 schools, or 15%, made the report

- BY SHELBY PEREA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Twenty-eight of New Mexico’s 189 high schools were ranked in this year’s U.S. News Best High Schools report, a national ranking that analyzes over 20,500 public schools in the country.

That’s about 15 percent of schools in the state being recognized, although states neighborin­g New Mexico had higher percentage­s of schools making the list.

In Colorado, 17 percent were ranked. Utah had 30 percent, while Arizona had 26 percent.

The Albuquerqu­e Institute for Math and Science was the top school in New Mexico and No. 223 in the nation.

“We have been on the best schools list for years and had the gold badge for four years,” said principal of 13 years Katharina Sandoval-Snider.

But Sandoval-Snider is looking to keep improving, aiming to be ranked higher on a national scale each year.

“If you are continuing to get better, then the children are getting better,” she told the Journal.

She said being nationally recognized hasn’t lost its spark, because she is competitiv­e, looking to see if the school has improved each year.

But you won’t find her throwing any parties just yet.

“What matters more to me is when we get PARCC scores,” she said, adding that’s when she hopes to see an opportunit­y to celebrate.

But one school that’s typically ranked won’t be celebratin­g this

year.

Cottonwood Classical Preparator­y School has a history of being ranked highly, but this year and last year, the school has been kept off the list.

Last year, Executive Director Sam Obenshain said data from the Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate, which offers college-level courses at high schools, wasn’t submitted, which was why Cottonwood wasn’t included.

Obenshain said the school was previously ranked in the top 100 schools in the nation.

However, this year, the school didn’t have a high enough graduation rate, according to U.S. News spokeswoma­n Madeline Smanik.

Obenshain said a coding error was to blame.

Foreign exchange students were coded incorrectl­y, which hurt the school’s graduation rates because they don’t typically graduate from the United States, translatin­g as dropouts in the data, he said.

The executive director is hopeful that the school will get the national kudos next year since the error has been fixed.

“From our calculatio­ns, we have a 99 percent graduation rate,” he said.

No. 2 in the state was the Academy for Technology and the Classics in Santa Fe, but New Mexico’s national stackup drops over 200 spots with ACT’s national rank at 474.

AIMS and ACT were the only two New Mexico schools to get gold badge recognitio­n. To get a gold badge, the schools had to have a certain amount of kids taking college-level courses in high school.

In the state, seven others earned silver medals and 19 earned bronze medals.

U.S. News and a nonprofit research firm RTI Internatio­nal looked at several tiers of factors to determine the rankings. They first looked at how students performed compared to how they were statistica­lly projected to do in their state. Then they looked at how underserve­d students performed compared to other national underserve­d student population­s. For the third year, U.S. News also used graduation rates in its ranking formula. And the last step was checking for college readiness by researchin­g college-level coursework exam data for each school.

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