The bulletin board for America's public schools. Parents, teachers, students, and staff. One community per school.

Texas schools ranked by test score

Latest STAAR year (2023-24). 3,404 schools with reported Social Studies scores. State average: 46.5%.
RankSchoolLevelSocial Studiesvs state
1751HUDSON MIDDLE
LUFKIN · HUDSON ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1752HUNTINGTON MIDDLE
HUNTINGTON · HUNTINGTON ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1753HUTCHINSON MIDDLE
LUBBOCK · LUBBOCK ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1754IRVIN H S
EL PASO · EL PASO ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1755KASHMERE H S
HOUSTON · HOUSTON ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1756KIPP SUNNYSIDE H S
HOUSTON · KIPP TEXAS PUBLIC SCHOOLS
High44.0%-2.5pp
1757LANCASTER H S
LANCASTER · LANCASTER ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1758LEGGETT H S
LEGGETT · LEGGETT ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1759MADISON H S
HOUSTON · HOUSTON ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1760MEMORIAL H S
PORT ARTHUR · PORT ARTHUR ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1761MERCEDES H S
MERCEDES · MERCEDES ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1762MIDWAY SCHOOL
HENRIETTA · MIDWAY ISD
Combined44.0%-2.5pp
1763NEWCASTLE SCHOOL
NEWCASTLE · NEWCASTLE ISD
Combined44.0%-2.5pp
1764PERMIAN H S
ODESSA · ECTOR COUNTY ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1765ROCKSPRINGS K-12
ROCKSPRINGS · ROCKSPRINGS ISD
Combined44.0%-2.5pp
1766RONALD THORNTON MIDDLE
MISSOURI CITY · FORT BEND ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1767ROTAN K-12
ROTAN · ROTAN ISD
Combined44.0%-2.5pp
1768RUNNING BRUSHY MIDDLE
CEDAR PARK · LEANDER ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1769SLATON H S
SLATON · SLATON ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1770SPRING H S
SPRING · SPRING ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1771SUDAN H S
SUDAN · SUDAN ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1772TIDEHAVEN INT
EL MATON · TIDEHAVEN ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1773TRENTON MIDDLE
TRENTON · TRENTON ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1774UNITED MIDDLE
LAREDO · UNITED ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1775UPLIFT MIGHTY PREP H S
FORT WORTH · UPLIFT EDUCATION
High44.0%-2.5pp
1776VALOR KYLE
KYLE · VALOR EDUCATION
Combined44.0%-2.5pp
1777VANGUARD MOZART
ALAMO · VANGUARD ACADEMY
Combined44.0%-2.5pp
1778WEST BRIAR MIDDLE
HOUSTON · HOUSTON ISD
Middle44.0%-2.5pp
1779WESTPHALIA EL
WESTPHALIA · WESTPHALIA ISD
Elementary44.0%-2.5pp
1780WORTHING H S
HOUSTON · HOUSTON ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1781YOUNG WOMEN'S LEADERSHIP ACADEMY
EL PASO · YSLETA ISD
High44.0%-2.5pp
1782ALEX SANGER PREPARATORY SCHOOL
DALLAS · DALLAS ISD
Elementary43.0%-3.5pp
1783ALPINE MIDDLE
ALPINE · ALPINE ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1784ANDREWS MIDDLE
ANDREWS · ANDREWS ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1785AVALON SCHOOL
AVALON · AVALON ISD
Combined43.0%-3.5pp
1786BOBBY SUMMERS MIDDLE
FATE · ROYSE CITY ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1787CHARLENE MCKINZEY MIDDLE
MANSFIELD · MANSFIELD ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1788COLLEGE STATION MIDDLE
COLLEGE STATION · COLLEGE STATION ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1789CREEKVIEW MIDDLE
FORT WORTH · EAGLE MT-SAGINAW ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1790EULA J H
CLYDE · EULA ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1791FLOUR BLUFF J H
CORPUS CHRISTI · FLOUR BLUFF ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1792FREDERICKSBURG MIDDLE
FREDERICKSBURG · FREDERICKSBURG ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1793GRAPELAND J H
GRAPELAND · GRAPELAND ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1794GREAT HEARTS WESTERN HILLS
SAN ANTONIO · GREAT HEARTS TEXAS
Combined43.0%-3.5pp
1795H M KING H S
KINGSVILLE · KINGSVILLE ISD
High43.0%-3.5pp
1796HARMONY J H
BIG SANDY · HARMONY ISD
Middle43.0%-3.5pp
1797IDEA COLLEGE PREPARATORY SAN JUAN
SAN JUAN · IDEA PUBLIC SCHOOLS
High43.0%-3.5pp
1798IDEA INGRAM HILLS COLLEGE PREPARATORY
SAN ANTONIO · IDEA PUBLIC SCHOOLS
High43.0%-3.5pp
1799IDEA MONTERREY PARK COLLEGE PREPARATORY
SAN ANTONIO · IDEA PUBLIC SCHOOLS
High43.0%-3.5pp
1800IDEA OWASSA COLLEGE PREPARATORY
PHARR · IDEA PUBLIC SCHOOLS
High43.0%-3.5pp
Page 36 of 69

About this ranking

Schools are ranked by the percentage of students who scored at or above the STAAR % Meets Grade Level or Above threshold on the latest available STAAR Social Studies test (school year 2023-24). A higher percentage is better.

Only public schools with a reasonable cohort size are included (at least 50 total students enrolled, since the source file does not include per-subject student counts), so very small programs and special-purpose centers are filtered out.

The state average shown above is enrollment-weighted: we multiply each school's score by how many of its students tested, sum those across every public school in Texas, and divide by the total students tested. This way a big school counts more than a tiny one in the typical-student average.