Schools

NJ Monthly Ranks EBHS 121st

The magazine's biennial ranking was released Tuesday and used a new methodology

East Brunswick is moving down in the ranks, according to New Jersey Monthly Magazine. The school was listed in 121st place in 2012—down from the 71st spot in 2010—on the just-released biennial ranking of 328 public high schools in the state.

NJ Monthly Magazine’s 2012 rankings of the top public high schools will be featured in the September issue, which hit newsstands on Tuesday, Aug. 28.

The magazine notes that the average class size at East Brunswick High School is 24.9 and that the combined average SAT score is 1665. 

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NJ Monthly Magazine made changes to its methodology this year, including a new graduation-rate calculation, eliminating student/computer ratio as a factor and increasing the weighting for data on test results, according to an article announcing the top public high schools.

Here are how other Middlesex County Schools compared.

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School 2012 2010 Metuchen 19 54 Highland Park 67 37 JP Stevens 80 65 Spotswood 102 105 Dunellen 112 110 East Brunswick 121 71 Monroe 124 118 John F. Kennedy Memorial 132 146 South Brunswick 138 89 Middlesex 155 183

The categories and indicators used in the ranking by NJ Monthly, listed on NJ Monthly Magazine's web site, are as follows:

School Environment: The sum of the standardized rank scores for average class size; student/faculty ratio; percentage of faculty with advanced degrees; and number of AP tests offered, which was calculated as a ratio of grade 11 and 12 enrollment in order not to penalize smaller schools. (Senior class size is shown in the published charts for reference only; it is not part of the ranking calculation.)

Student Performance: The sum of the standardized rank scores for average combined SAT score; percentage of students showing advanced proficiency on HSPA; and students scoring a 3 or higher on AP tests as a percentage of all juniors and seniors.

Student Outcomes: A single score based on a new graduation-rate calculation (four-year adjusted cohort graduation rate) introduced by New Jersey in 2011, as mandated by the federal government. Essentially, the adjusted cohort formula divides a school’s number of four-year graduates by the number of first-time ninth-graders who entered the cohort four years earlier. For further information, Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.

Vocational schools: Schools defined in this category by the state Department of Education were ranked using the same methodology as other public schools, but with two exceptions. No average class size is available for these schools, since many students are shared with mainstream schools. Similarly, there is insufficient data on AP tests.

Special Notes: Some schools were missing only AP-related data, particularly the number of students who scored a 3 or higher on AP tests. For these schools (which had fewer than 10 students who took an AP test) a value was imputed for purposes of the ranking using an average of other schools in their DFG. Also, for certain districts where there were obvious errors in the data (Midland Park, Elizabeth and Paterson), corrections were obtained directly from the districts.

What do you think of all these rankings? Let us know in the comments section below.

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