More high schools dropping class ranking Elmbrook schools are latest to cite college admission concerns

Amy Hetzner:

A 3.5 grade-point average is enough to qualify a student for honor roll and be considered above a B-plus average at Brookfield East High School, but it might not be enough to put a student among the top third of the class.
That’s one of the reasons why sophomores at the school say they won’t be sad when class rank is eliminated from high school transcripts and report cards in two years.
“We get good grades, but we don’t get credit for it,” said Alison Kent, a sophomore at Brookfield East. “You can have a 3.5 or higher and it looks terrible.”
Nearly a decade after some of the state’s top-performing high schools began dropping class rank from their students’ transcripts, more are following their lead.
The Elmbrook School Board voted this month to end reporting class rank on high school transcripts and student report cards in the 2011-’12 school year. The school boards for Nicolet and Mequon-Thiensville will consider whether to enact similar measures this summer.