Summit Prep follows the personalized, project-based learning curriculum known as Summit Learning. The typical class size is about 25 students or less to one teacher. Unlike many typical schools with an elective for one period a day, Summit spreads it throughout the school year. Called "Expeditions", it is now taken in two-week periods, which are broken up by six weeks of regular classes in between. The school runs all students through same or very similar curricula, with all students taking a standardized curriculum and some students taking extra/alternative courses. 100% of Summit Prep graduates meet or exceed the University of California's A-G college entrance requirements. All Summit Prep students take 6 or more AP® courses and attempt at least one AP® exam by graduation. Also, all students take Spanish language courses during their four years.
Statistics
Demographics
2015-2016
412 students: 222 Male, 190 Female
Hispanic
White
Asian
Two or More Races
Filipino
African American
Pacific Islander
American Indian
Not Reported
236
87
23
19
7
5
4
1
30
%
%
%
%
%
%
%
%
%
Standardized testing
Awards and recognition
Year after year, Summit Prep is named one of America's BestHigh Schools by U.S. News & World Report and is awarded a gold medal for college readiness. For 2017, Summit Preparatory Charter High is ranked 21st within California, and the AP® participation rate 100 percent. The student body makeup is 51 percent male and 49 percent female, and the total minority enrollment is 75 percent. Summit Prep was also named one of America's Most Challenging High Schools by the Washington Post for 2017. Summit Prep was listed as the #132 high school in the country in Newsweek's 2011 America's Best Public High Schools and among the top three in Northern California. Newsweek counted Summit among the 10 Miracle High Schools for "taking students at all skill levels, from all strata, and turning out uniformly qualified graduates." Summit Prep was named in the top 100 public high schools in the US and top 10 public high schools in California in the 2010 Newsweek . It is one of five schools to which families are applying in the 2010 documentary Waiting for Superman.