This Private High School Ranks As The Best In Tennessee

This Private High School Ranks As The Best In Tennessee

This Private High School Ranks As The Best In Tennessee

Image Credit: Adam Fagen / CC

By Samuel Stebbins, 24/7 Wall St. via The Center Square

Faith in America’s public education system is fading in many parts of the country. According to a recent Gallup poll, only 28% of Americans have a high level of confidence in public schools, down from over 60% in the mid-1970s. While much of this distrust has been fueled in recent years by culture war issues, many public schools also face deeper, structural problems related to funding, staffing, and academic outcomes.

Partially as a result, millions of American parents opt to send their children to a private school. Though private schools charge tuition, they also tend to offer distinct advantages over a public education. (Here is a look at states where public schools are losing the most students.)

Private schools often have smaller class sizes, allowing for more individualized instruction and closer student-teacher and parent-teacher relationships. Many private schools also have more rigorous curriculums than public schools and emphasize a well-rounded education that extends beyond the classroom. Private school students tend to perform better on standardized tests and are more likely to later attend top-tier colleges and universities than public school students. Additionally, unlike public schools, private institutions can have a religious affiliation or a single-sex student body, which may be important to some parents.

According to Niche, an education research platform, University School of Nashville, located in Nashville, ranks as the best private high school in Tennessee. University School of Nashville enrolls a total of 1,071 students, and its student-teacher ratio is 9:1.

The school’s annual tuition is $27,550. According to self-reported standardized test results, the average SAT score among students at University School of Nashville is 1380 out of a possible 1600 and the average ACT score is 31 out of 36. The school also has a graduation rate of 100%.

All data in this story was provided by Niche. Niche’s ranking is based on a weighted index of six measures, including class size, self-reported standardized test scores, post-graduate college enrollment, and parent and student surveys. A full description of each measure and its weighting is available here.

StateBest private high schoolTotal enrollmentStudents per teacherAvg. graduation rate (%)Annual tuition ($)
AlabamaIndian Springs School327810027,300
AlaskaHoly Rosary Academy162101008,750
ArizonaPhoenix Country Day School750710028,200
ArkansasThaden School31769027,600
CaliforniaHarvard-Westlake School1,620810042,600
ColoradoKent Denver School749910034,648
ConnecticutChoate Rosemary Hall868710050,910
DelawareSt. Andrew’s School310710055,500
FloridaRansom Everglades School1,141710045,810
GeorgiaThe Westminster Schools1,900610034,106
Hawaii‘Iolani School2,1811010027,175
IdahoRiverstone International School416910021,970
IllinoisUniversity of Chicago Laboratory Schools2,05189833,558
IndianaCulver Academies832610057,000
IowaMaharishi School165310019,500
KansasWichita Collegiate School875810020,360
KentuckyKentucky Country Day School81799925,900
LouisianaIsidore Newman School917810024,029
MaineWaynflete596410035,465
MarylandHolton-Arms School665810048,250
MassachusettsPhillips Academy Andover1,18759951,380
MichiganCranbrook Schools1,659710038,600
MinnesotaThe International School of Minnesota310810023,250
MississippiSt. Andrew’s Episcopal School1,097810021,240
MissouriJohn Burroughs School660610032,800
MontanaBillings Central Catholic High School33010988,640
NebraskaBrownell Talbot School441910019,950
NevadaThe Meadows School940810030,380
New HampshirePhillips Exeter Academy1,085510038,740
New JerseyPrinceton International School of Math and Science120510043,000
New MexicoAlbuquerque Academy1,183710026,176
New YorkTrinity School1,001610047,965
North CarolinaCary Academy787810028,495
North DakotaOak Grove Lutheran School45510908,480
OhioWestern Reserve Academy441610040,975
OklahomaCasady School993810022,120
OregonCatlin Gabel School783910038,800
PennsylvaniaGermantown Friends School1,129510041,500
Rhode IslandThe Wheeler School811610041,830
South CarolinaChrist Church Episcopal School1,2011010023,125
South DakotaFreeman Academy756908,905
TennesseeUniversity School of Nashville1,071910027,550
TexasSt. Mark’s School of Texas863910029,496
UtahThe Waterford School1,025710027,530
VermontThe Putney School23539642,400
VirginiaBASIS Independent McLean522710033,000
WashingtonLakeside School838910032,000
West VirginiaThe Linsly School465910019,850
WisconsinBrookfield Academy842810022,950
WyomingJackson Hole Community School8349725,100
Source 24/7 Wall St.

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One Response

  1. Those private schools can pick and choose who they will accept based on the parents ability to pay. I’m not knocking those schools just saying if they had to compete on the same level as public schools, such as forty or fifty students per teacher and deal with unions that constantly demand more money while giving less results, the picture would be much different. Just saying.

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