VaticanAssassin
God Mod
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2011
- Posts
- 12,391
The first criteria in the first link is the dropout rate. That's a really stepped on number.
They used several criteria:
"For each state, we considered the percentages of students taking the SAT, ACT and AP tests, and the average scores for those tests. We also looked at the state-level funding-per-student, the student-teacher ratio, the high school dropout rate and the percentage of high school graduates attending college after graduation (read more about our methodology below)."
But as I mention, use whatever you want. I looked at several and the top ten states remained pretty consistent even if they varied in where in the top ten they ranked.
