Virginia schools ranked by test score
Latest SOL year (2024-25). 13 schools with reported English: Reading scores. State average: 74.2%.
| Rank | School | Level | English: Reading | vs state |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Woodgrove High Purcellville · Loudoun County Public Schools | Combined | 96.0% | +21.8pp |
| 2 | Heritage High Leesburg · Loudoun County Public Schools | Combined | 94.0% | +19.8pp |
| 3 | Radford City Virtual Radford · Radford City Public Schools | Combined | 94.0% | +19.8pp |
| 4 | Rock Ridge High Ashburn · Loudoun County Public Schools | Combined | 94.0% | +19.8pp |
| 5 | Dominion High Sterling · Loudoun County Public Schools | Combined | 86.0% | +11.8pp |
| 6 | Tangier Combined Tangier · Accomack County Public Schools | Combined | 86.0% | +11.8pp |
| 7 | Spotsylvania High Spotsylvania · Spotsylvania County Public Schools | Combined | 85.0% | +10.8pp |
| 8 | Tuscarora High Leesburg · Loudoun County Public Schools | Combined | 82.0% | +7.8pp |
| 9 | Virginia Virtual Academy at Salem Salem · Salem City Public Schools | Combined | 76.0% | +1.8pp |
| 10 | Giles County K-12 Virtual School Pearisburg · Giles County Public Schools | Combined | 74.0% | -0.2pp |
| 11 | Henrico Virtual Academy Henrico · Henrico County Public Schools | Combined | 67.0% | -7.2pp |
| 12 | Pulaski County Public Schools Virtual School K-12 Pulaski · Pulaski County Public Schools | Combined | 66.0% | -8.2pp |
| 13 | Richmond Virtual Academy Richmond · Richmond City Public Schools | Combined | 58.0% | -16.2pp |
About this ranking
Schools are ranked by the percentage of students who scored at or above the SOL % Passing threshold on the latest available SOL English: Reading test (school year 2024-25). 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 Virginia, and divide by the total students tested. This way a big school counts more than a tiny one in the typical-student average.