Miami Herald (Sunday)

U.S. News & World Report names Miami school 4th best

- BY COLLEEN WRIGHT cawright@miamiheral­d.com Colleen Wright: 305-376-3003, @Colleen_Wright

School for Advanced Studies (SAS) in MiamiDade is on a meteoric rise to the top.

The SAS schools were named the fourth-best public high school in the nation and got the honor of the top public high school in Florida, according to the 2020 U.S. News & World Report Best High Schools Rankings released Tuesday. Last year, SAS rose to the second-best high school in the state and 26th in the nation.

“It’s an incredible accomplish­ment,” said Principal Omar Monteagudo. “We’re known as the dream factory, and that’s because we truly try to transform our students not only academical­ly but socially and emotionall­y.”

The report’s rankings don’t parse out the five campuses of SAS, which are based at five Miami Dade College campuses — a decision made by U.S. News and World Report. These selective, dualenroll­ment schools with just juniors and seniors offer students the opportunit­y to graduate with a high school diploma and an associate’s degree from Miami Dade College.

A total of 786 students are enrolled at SAS, but Kendall is the largest campus with 258 students. Of those, 65% of students are female. Monteagudo said all students are on track to graduate with an associate’s degree this year.

SAS was bested nationally only by Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Alexandria, Virginia; Academic Magnet High

School in North Charleston, South Carolina, and Merrol Hyde Magnet School in Hendersonv­ille, Tennessee, in that order.

“We’re not into rankings, but rather the rankings is an indication or byproduct of the work we get in,” Monteagudo said. “It’s great we get validated, but our drive is not by a number.”

He said that while some assume that the county’s best students flock to SAS ready for the challenge of taking high school and college courses simultaneo­usly, that isn’t the case. Monteagudo said the school has been working on an interventi­on program that tutors students in math, reading and writing. The school has been laser focused on data and profession­al developmen­t for its teachers, the “most important variable,” he said.

“We’ve had a game plan on how we’re going to take SAS to the next level,” Monteagudo said.

“We have never rested on our laurels. We use the accomplish­ments of SAS as a building block. Our best days and our best years are still ahead of us.”

Six schools in MiamiDade County ranked in the top 10 in Florida and top 100 nationally. Young Women’s Preparator­y Academy, third best in the state, ranked 52nd nationally. The others are Design and Architectu­re Senior High (sixth in Florida, 72nd nationally), Archimedea­n Upper Conservato­ry Charter School (seventh and 74th), Internatio­nal Studies Charter High School (eighth and 83rd), and Jose Marti Mast 6-12 Academy (ninth and 94th). Just outside this group was iPrep Academy at 11th and 104th.

All of those schools are either selective magnet schools or charter schools. You have to go far down the list to find a neighborho­od school ranked. The first one up in MiamiDade is Miami Palmetto Senior High, ranked 2,012th nationally and 117th in Florida.

Public schools in Broward County had a weaker showing in this year’s rankings. Somerset Arts Conservato­ry in Pembroke Pines ranked 18th in the state and 155th nationally. Pompano Beach High School, a neighborho­od high school, ranked 21st in the state and 221st nationally.

U.S. News and World Report’s annual high school rankings are based on six criteria: 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. More than 17,700 public high schools were ranked this year.

See where your school ranks here.

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