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Posted in Education
Last updated 06/16/2010 at 7:29 a.m. PDT

Berkeley High Slips on Top Schools List

Still ranked among best 1,600 public high schools

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By on June 15, 2010 - 10:22 a.m. PDT
Courtesy of InBerkeley
Berkeley High School Cafeteria

Berkeley High School once again made Newsweek magazine’s list of the top American public high schools, but for the first time in four years its rating went down rather than up.

BHS was ranked 446 out of 1,600 schools in the 2010 report. In 2009, the high school was ranked 271, up from the 2008 ranking of 286.

The slip is interesting. Newsweek calculates its scores by taking the number of Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate tests taken at the school and dividing it by the number of seniors to come up with an index rate. In 2010, this rate was 2.401, a drop from last year’s 2.728. (Read a full explanation of its ranking system.)

But 2009 was the first year Berkeley High offered IB tests, so one would think that rate would improve. It is possible, however, that students who in past years would have taken an AP test switched to taking IB tests. Then there wouldn’t be a jump in the number of high level tests taken by students.

Newsweek states that the ranking on the list is not as critical as its index rate. As more schools in the U.S. find out about the list and submit their statistics, it is common for other schools to slip in the rankings, said the magazine.

Berkeley Unified School District spokesman Mark Coplan said BHS’ ranking slip may have had more to do with other schools improving rather than Berkeley High getting worse.

“It’s not based on a lessening of progress at Berkeley High, but an acceleration elsewhere,” said Coplan.

Newsweek’s rankings are controversial because they look at just one small aspect of a school. The author, Jay Mathews, believes strongly in the merit of AP and IB classes. He thinks they are the best indicators of performance in college.

‘To send a student off to college without having had an AP, IB, or Cambridge course and test is like insisting that a child learn to ride a bike without ever taking off the training wheels,’ writes Mathews.

In December 2009, U.S. News & World Report compiled its own list of the best high schools in the U.S., using completely different assessment tools. Berkeley High did not even make that list.

But once again Berkeley High seniors are going off to the nation’s best colleges.

Students this year were accepted at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Columbia, Brown, University of Pennsylvania, Williams, Dartmouth, Wesleyan, Vassar, Amherst, Sarah Lawrence, UC Berkeley, UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, UC Davis, UC San Diego, Michigan, U Mass, Kenyon, Pitzer, Pomona, Macalester, Bard, Whitman, Earlham, Kenyon, Oberlin, Grinnell, Skidmore, Berklee College of Music, the University of Edinburgh, St. Andrews, Aberdeen, and Durham. Students were also accepted at the California State Universities.

Other Bay Area high schools that made Newsweek's list include Skyline in Oakland, Albany High, Acalanes, and George Washington, Mission, Gateway and Balboa in San Francisco.

CarolineSF
CarolineSF
wrote on 06/15/2010 at 6:46 p.m. PDT

It's not clear that the Bay Citizen understands the degree to which Newsweek's criterion for this list is total BS and does not in any way measure the effectiveness of a school, aside from being corrupt and unethical.

I'll restate the single, lone criterion: the percentage of students in a school who take an AP or IB test. How the students SCORE on the test does not factor in -- only how many TAKE the test. They could all flunk and it would still count.

One obvious problem with that criterion is that it's very easy to manipulate. Sign up every kid in the school for an AP test and there you are.

But wait -- there's one problem with that -- the fee to take an AP test is $86.

So, there's another issue with Newsweek's criterion -- it favors schools and districts that can afford to pay their students' $86 test fees, or at least schools and districts where all the students can easily afford $86 test fees. ...

CarolineSF
CarolineSF
wrote on 06/15/2010 at 6:47 p.m. PDT

... Thorough reporting on the ridiculous and corrupt Newsweek rankings needs to shine a harsh light on all those points. When you're addressing a powerful interest like Newsweek's corporate owners, please be tough and demanding and ask uncomfortable questions!
###

voltairesmistress
voltairesmistress
wrote on 06/16/2010 at 7:12 a.m. PDT

CarolineSF, You are so right! When Mission and Balboa high schools can make a list of top schools, something is wrong with the metric. As a side note: Newsweek's bogus ranking of colleges has had a pernicious effect too.

CarolineSF
CarolineSF
wrote on 06/16/2010 at 7:29 a.m. PDT

Actually, Balboa High School is an excellent school, Voltaire's Mistress. It has steadily risen in test scores over the page 7-8 years and has risen even faster in reputation. It was on both my kids' list of top choices for high school, though they both ended up auditioning into School of the Arts. Mission is a more challenged school here in SFUSD.

But that aside, your greater comment is accurate. Newsweek's metric for this list is false and corrupt. The thoughtful press needs to either ignore or debunk this embarrassment to journalism -- not buy into it or hype it. Bay Citizen needs to ask tougher questions and do more homework.

It's actually U.S. News & World Report that ranks colleges; the issues are different, though the problems are equally significant.

CarolineSF
CarolineSF
wrote on 06/15/2010 at 6:47 p.m. PDT


(There is fee relief only at a very, very low income level -- students qualifying for free/reduced school lunch, an income that is far below the "self-sufficiency" level in the Bay Area.)

And here's a third problem: Newsweek is in a situation of extreme appearance of conflict of interest in creating a criterion that pushes every possible student to take AP and IB tests. That's because Newsweek's corporate parent, the Washington Post Co., owns Kaplan, the powerhouse test prep firm. More testing presumably means more likely business for Kaplan. In fact, Newsweek and the Washington Post are well known to be hemorrhaging money, while Kaplan is the company's (to mix a metaphor) cash cow.

Now, it may be that this is not deliberate at all, but it clearly poses the APPEARANCE of conflict of interest, and journalistic codes of ethics call for avoiding the APPEARANCE of conflict of interest. ...

CarolineSF
CarolineSF
wrote on 06/15/2010 at 6:49 p.m. PDT

Those comments posted out of order and should be read 1, 3, 2. Sorry for the length, but this called for some serious additional information.

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