Published: Sept. 12, 2016
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From an innovative rural school in Vermont to an international refugee-serving school in California, 20 inspiring schools are being acknowledged as 2016 “Schools of Opportunity.”

Based at the University of Colorado Boulder School of Education, the sponsors the project, which identifies and recognizes excellent public high schools that actively strive to close opportunity gaps — the differences in opportunities and resources that drive the well-known achievement gaps, said NEPC Director and CU Boulder Professor Kevin Welner.

“Children learn when they have opportunities to learn,” said Welner, co-director for the project. “When those opportunities are denied, they fall behind.”

During the project’s 2014-15 pilot year, the Schools of Opportunity distinction was awarded to schools in just two states, Colorado and New York. In 2015-16, the project expanded to the entire U.S. It now recognizes schools from coast to coast.

“The project offers an alternative way of assessing school quality—one that rejects the idea that test scores identify the nation’s best schools,” said Carol Burris, co-director of the project. “Schools of Opportunity use research-based practices to support all students and their teachers, thereby creating engaged and successful learning environments.”

In addition to Burris and Welner, the effort was led by Linda Molner Kelley, Michelle Renee Valladares and Rhianna Kirk. The review team — comprised of 40 researchers, teachers, policy makers and administrators — based the “gold” and “silver” recognitions on specific principles identified in the book, Closing the Opportunity Gap, which was co-edited by Welner.

Applications went through four levels of screening, including rubric-based ratings and in-person evaluator visits to the recognized “gold” schools. Evaluators looked at school practices that fell into categories, such as create and maintain healthy school culture; broaden and enrich school curriculum; use a variety of assessments designed to respond to student needs; and support teachers as professionals.

The eight Gold Schools of Opportunity in 2016 are:








The 12 high schools that earned a Silver Schools of Opportunity designation in 2016 are:












To learn more about the schools, including descriptions for each, and the project, visit.

The Schools of Opportunity project is supported by the Ford Foundation and the National Education Association Foundation.  The call for nominations for the 2017 Schools of Opportunity recognitions will launch in November 2016 and evaluations will take place in the spring. Nomination material will be available at .


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Related Faculty: Kevin Welner, Michelle Renée Valladares