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Teacher quality
Principal leadership
Parent involvement
Most students at Langley feel like they are better then others. Most kids don't realize that popularity dies out during college. There is absolutely no school spirit. I thought high school would be an enjoyable four years. I never thought high school would be this bad. Langley has made high school a bad experience for me. 10 years from now, I will have zero refreshing memories of Langley. It's a white kid school. I feel like I have been mentally affected. Please listen to me and some of the other reviewers and don't send your kids to Langley and make the same mistake my parents made. I feel like Langley has affected my confidence and ruined my future. It is extremely challenging academcially and socially for newcomers.
—Submitted by a student
I am part of the 2015 class. Langley has been a lousy experience for me. Maybe Langley has excellent teachers for the top AP courses, which is a huge part of this school, but for the regular kids the teachers don't care about you. One of my current science courses is taught by a different teacher during his lunch break, after we had a substitute for 6 weeks. No one seems to care. We aren't the AP courses, which then they would have cared. We are supposed to learn from our science book on our own. But we take time away from the other AP classes so the teachers seem to resent us. The counselors don't help you unless you are the top kids.
—Submitted by a student
Excellent -- the teachers are true educators who actually care about the students and their development. The school offers a very challenging and diverse selection of courses. There are many activities for the students - academic, athletic and service. The school leadership is truly committed to making the environment safe and productive and fun for the students. Parents are supportive of the school and the efforts that the students and administrators make. What a great place.
—Submitted by a parent
We have 2 kids at Langley and our kids hate Langley and have been asking us to move. We are thinking about having them attend another school for next year. Friends of ours have used the International Baccalaureate program at reston to get their daughter out of Langley due to the cliques. Others have gone to Bishop O'C after going freshman year here. Langley is driven by status and wealth. Largely driven by the parents of the families that live in this Great Falls area. The wealth, going to Europe for summer trips, going to Colorado for spring break, going to Caymans for winter break is just over the top. It really is a distorted environment. As example, take a drive by the parking lot some day, these are the kids cars, or drive thru the neighborhoods with the multi million dollar houses. And the kids have social cliques just as any high school, but at Langley the kids are hugely aware of wealth and status and push it with clothes, cars, vacations etc.. There are very few families with 2 working parents and struggling to save for college. It distorts the importance of money in life.
—Submitted by a parent
I am a part of the class of 2015 for this school and I have had more good and great teachers than bad ones. I admit every school has its good and bad teachers, students, and such. But Langley High School is seriously underrated. I mean, sure, we are known for certain snobs, we are known for having huge gaps between student performance. And while I do complain some times about certain teachers and peers, I realize that my college applications and my future is all decided by me. That is why unlike most of the student reviewers here, I am actually appreciative of the learning environment here. I am actually one of the lesser-class people when it comes to the fact that Langley is a "rich people's school" but I don't feel any sort of inferiority or pressure yet I'm not terribly anti-social. It's amazing how people have pointed out certain ethnic groups and blamed others for their own losses. I have done well and I have not done so well at times but once you know how to manage, you can do well here with the benefit of attending one of the historically highest ranked schools in the nation.
—Submitted by a student
I think that Langley is a very diverse school and can be viewed different ways based on how a student decides to take it on. Sure there are annoying kids and some bad teachers that can get on your nerves, but overall it is a very safe environment (physically) and there are plenty of courses available and many good teachers. The courses are typically challenging, but not to the point at which it is impossible to get an A. Also many kids are very wealthy, but that really does not have a large effect on everything else (other than the sweet cars in the student parking lot). There are many good opportunities that students can take advantage of, which is not always seen in other schools.
—Submitted by a student
Langley is an awful environment for most normal families. This school is filled with the rich. The environment will screw with your kid's minds. It is not a normal world and the bullying / mean factor is over the top. What makes it worse is the administration doesn't care about you unless you are in the AP classes and A students. You are the outsider if you are not the smart kid. I really want to leave and go to a different school, one in which having a 125 IQ is ok and not deficient, one where a house with only 4 bedrooms and 2 floors is ok, and not laughed at. It sucks it really does.
—Submitted by a student
I am a Langley Senior, Clas of 2013. Take it from me, Langley can be the last place you may want to be. Positives: -Extremely hard classes offered- AP's honors... -Great boys lacrosse team -A few good teachers -Great English teachers...depending on who you get -Nice new (posh) turf field Negatives: -The school has mold. Yes, that is very true. -The school is full of egoistical white rich kids who don't accept different people. -Very (too hard) classes at times -Most teachers don't care for students that are not straight-A students -Most teachers refuse to work with non-A students -If you are special ed of any kind, you will be: 1) Bullied by the administration and students 2) Treated like a complete moron by the administration, teachers, students, ect. 3) Give the worst education possible and so much more! If you are gay: I'd go elsewhere for schooling. (Or don't let the homophobic comments by other students get to you & don't come out) Burn out rate: I heard this myth that high school is fun, but i don't think thats true. My Gwad, burn out rate is very high. Just look at all the stress! Another positive: College will be very easy.. But what will I do with all that time?!
—Submitted by a student
I am going to agree with the June 6th poster. This is a weak administration. My child has a math teacher who is barely understandable and on top of that, can't teach. The administration blames it on the child, even if the child has a straight A average. In addition, when the online reviews of these teachers are pointed out, again, the administration blames it on the students. And when that doesn't work, they blame it on the parents. It's really disgraceful. I will be placing my child in private school; I feel badly for the parents who cannot.
—Submitted by a parent
Honestly, the people who went to Langley and said it's awful have no idea what type of learning environment they could have been a part of. I went from a different school system to Fairfax County Schools and would not be where I am today if it wasn't for being put into a difficult academic environment with a steep learning curve. Langley teaches you to deal with hard work and new challenges. The teachers are also excellent, very helpful, and caring if you just get to know them, regardless of whether you're in an AP class or not. As for the social life, blame the parents, not the high school. The parents of the Great Falls/McLean area should strive to give their kids some perspective, rather than shelter them. If you're a student at Langley and you want to be part of the snobby clique, then go for it; however, there are plenty of other social groups to become involved with. As long as you have a good head on your shoulders and some perspective, then the other kids won't bother you as much. It's high school. There are cliques and times become difficult. It often takes a level of personal maturity to deal with those issues, and no high school is the exception.
Langley used to be one of the bst schools in the nation. Now, 2012, the current administration is running the school into the ground. Questionable hires and poor leadership is what is causing the best teachers to leave/retire, as well as the drop in the school rankings and spirit. Instead of taking a survey on the effectiveness of teachers we should be taking a vote of conficence on admin.
This school is one of the best in the country. Most of the reviews on here are from people who had a bad experience with the "social life" of Langley. I have graduate of class of 2011, and all i can say is if you want to do well in school and get a great education, you should go to Langley. They offer 21+ Ap classes and countless honors, more than enough interesting electives and classes to keep you busy and competitive, as i dont recommend taking more than 3 at one time. The stress to get into a good college and grades is pretty intense and overwhelming, but you are competing with 500+ other people in your class. Depending on the classes you are taking the teacher will very from a easy regular laid back teacher, to an uptight AP European studies teacher. You will be 110% prepared for college as most of the teachers out it, which is true that i now go to VT. Some other reviews mention that wealth is a huge factor, i am not going to lie, it is. People compare the clothes, and cars that your peers have, but in my experience that has never stopped someone from not fitting in or making any friend. However, if you are a normal person who wants to do well, this is best school.
—Submitted by a student
I graduated from Langley in 1987 and the recent comments are strikingly similar to my personal experiences when I attended Langley over twenty years ago. Now that I am raising two kids of my own, I use Langley as a benchmark for what to seek/not seek in my own childrens' experience. If your child comes from a very wealthy family and is academically driven, Langley's culture and academic offerings would probably be a good fit. However, if your child is academically average and an otherwise "average kid," it will be hard for your child to flourish. He or she will sit on the social periphery and get written off by the teachers. This is a niche school for socially elite, academically gifted students.
—Submitted by a parent
The quality of the teaching at Langley is below average. Most teachers are not creative and they don t really care. There are many bright students here who can teach themselves from the text. The majorities of teachers here do not inspire a love of learning in the students or give students real confidence in their abilities and encouragement to achieve. This is not meant to degrade the teachers. The system is a bureaucracy and it s broken. The reason the SAT scores are above average is because many of the parents are highly educated, able to tutor their kids or are paying lots of money for tutors and SAT prep. There is an extremely high amount of drug use and drinking. If you think this is a good school then it because you have not been exposed to what a true quality education is. If you have an average student and send them here they will remain very average and not realize their full potential. Great schools take average students and inspire them. This school does not.
—Submitted by a parent
I am a graduated from Langley High School over 15 years ago. I was reading the recent reviews and it is sad to say that nothing has changed from when I attended the school. I hated everything about the school. Yes, I received a good education but looking back and not having good memories of high school is sad. It is sad what wealth can do to people. I was looking at a school district for my own kids as I my family will be relocating there from the northeast and after reading these reviews I am going to put more focus on finding a top-notch private school.
The school is great academically, but difficult socially if you're not in the "popular" clique. While the teachers are great and like seeing the students excel and prepare for college, the students themselves have no idea what reality is. Most kids here are rich, and have been spoiled their entire lives. People here seem to be materialistic and quick to judge. The transition from Texas schools to Langley hasn't been the smoothest for me. The competition for such good grades, meeting so many new people and making friends, and adjusting to the new environment has hurt my grades. However, I hope to make my next years at Langley more enjoyable than my first year.
—Submitted by a student
Great. The academics are good. That'll get you in, but what about interaction skills in college? No one here knows how to communicate like a normal being, let alone their constant judging of other people. NORMAL people don't analyze others that much....who has time? What really ruined it for me and a lot of others is the social life here. Take it or leave it, everyone who says the social life here sucks, is 100% right. To sum it all up, some people here need a REALITY check and know that when they go off to college, it's not all about your image and popularity or what clothes you have, or most importantly, WHO YOU HANG OUT WITH. No one cares, not now, not ever. Please, get a life other than Langley. I wish I went to McLean, thank goodness I'm out of Langley. Oh, and the teachers are exactly like the kids. It's pathetic in all honesty.
—Submitted by a student
Clearly the best public high school in the region and one of the best in the country. Despite the "brain-drain" effect of Thomas Jefferson Magnet High School in Fairfax County, Langley has survived as an incredible comprehensive public high school offering the best in academics, international diversity, athletics, and extracurricular opportunities.
This school offers good academic classes (Honors, AP) but the social part of this school is absolutely horrible! its all based upon how much money you have, and what clothes you wear. If you dont have gucci purses, and prada shoes you will be labeled a poor loser. Which is really sad. This school needs a student attitude makeover.
—Submitted by a student
(1)As a former LHS student, I am shocked at some of the negative responses from other Langley graduates, students and parents. Some of the comments on this board are completely fabricated or exaggerated. Yes, there are cliques. Yes, the workload is difficult. Yes, high school kids will experiment with drinking. These are inevitable activities that happen in high schools all across America. The cliques are particularly not as bad as everyone is describing on here. There is definitely an 'in-crowd', but as long as you even attempt to get involved you can find your niche. I think it is ridiculous that students transfer rather than work through their social troubles. They are taking the easy way out instead of learning how to improve their communication and social skills. I was involved with cheerleading, student government, and multiple other activities and clubs; regardless of the diversity between them, I was able to find friends in and be accepted by each of these groups.
—Submitted by a student
Community ratings and reviews do not represent the views of GreatSchools nor does GreatSchools check their accuracy or verify the reviewers' identities. Use your discretion when evaluating these reviews.
The Community Rating is the school’s average rating from its community members (e.g., parents, students, and school staff). The highest possible rating is five stars; the lowest is one star.
Virginia school accreditation ratings reflect student achievement on Standards of Learning (SOL) tests and other assessments in English, history/social science, math and science. The 2009-2010 ratings are based on passing rates on tests taken during the 2008-2009 school year or on overall achievement during the three most recent years. Schools are identified as either Fully Accredited, Accredited with Warning, Conditionally Accredited or Accreditation Denied.
See Virginia's state standards
Source: Virginia Department of Education
The state average for Algebra I was 75% in 2012.
115 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
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The state average for Algebra II was 69% in 2012.
523 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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The state average for Biology was 92% in 2012.
549 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
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The state average for Chemistry was 93% in 2012.
461 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
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The state average for Earth Science was 90% in 2012.
111 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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The state average for English: Reading was 94% in 2012.
297 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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The state average for English: Writing was 93% in 2012.
296 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
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The state average for Geometry was 74% in 2012.
416 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
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The state average for Virginia and United States History was 85% in 2012.
299 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
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The state average for World Geography was 85% in 2012.
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2010
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The state average for World History I was 84% in 2012.
547 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
2010
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The state average for World History II was 85% in 2012.
505 students were tested at this school in 2012.
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2011
2010
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In 2011-2012 Virginia used the Standards of Learning (SOL) End-of-Course tests to assess students in reading, writing, math, science and history/social science subjects at the end of each course, regardless of the student's grade level. The SOL End-of-Course tests are standards-based, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Virginia. High school students must pass at least six SOL End-of-Course tests to graduate. The goal is for all students to pass the tests.
See Virginia's state standards
Source: Virginia Department of Education
| All Students | 84% |
| Female students | 83% |
| Male students | 85% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 100% |
| Hispanic | n/a |
| White students | 82% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 84% |
| Students with disabilities | 69% |
| Students without disabilities | 90% |
| Limited English proficient students | 75% |
| Proficient in English | 85% |
| Not migrant | 84% |
| All Students | 92% |
| Female students | 89% |
| Male students | 95% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 97% |
| Hispanic | 90% |
| White students | 92% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 92% |
| Students with disabilities | 73% |
| Students without disabilities | 94% |
| Limited English proficient students | 100% |
| Proficient in English | 92% |
| Not migrant | 92% |
| All Students | 100% |
| Female students | 100% |
| Male students | 100% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 100% |
| Hispanic | 100% |
| White students | 99% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 100% |
| Students with disabilities | 98% |
| Students without disabilities | 100% |
| Limited English proficient students | 97% |
| Proficient in English | 100% |
| Not migrant | 100% |
| All Students | 97% |
| Female students | 98% |
| Male students | 97% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 100% |
| Hispanic | 100% |
| White students | 97% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 97% |
| Students with disabilities | 89% |
| Students without disabilities | 99% |
| Limited English proficient students | 94% |
| Proficient in English | 98% |
| Not migrant | 97% |
| All Students | 100% |
| Female students | 100% |
| Male students | 100% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 100% |
| Hispanic | n/a |
| White students | 100% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 100% |
| Students with disabilities | 100% |
| Students without disabilities | 100% |
| Limited English proficient students | n/a |
| Proficient in English | 100% |
| Not migrant | 100% |
| All Students | 99% |
| Female students | 100% |
| Male students | 98% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 100% |
| Hispanic | 100% |
| White students | 99% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 99% |
| Students with disabilities | 92% |
| Students without disabilities | 100% |
| Limited English proficient students | 100% |
| Proficient in English | 99% |
| Not migrant | 99% |
| All Students | 100% |
| Female students | 100% |
| Male students | 99% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 100% |
| Hispanic | 100% |
| White students | 100% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 100% |
| Students with disabilities | 97% |
| Students without disabilities | 100% |
| Limited English proficient students | 100% |
| Proficient in English | 100% |
| Not migrant | 100% |
| All Students | 96% |
| Female students | 96% |
| Male students | 96% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 98% |
| Hispanic | 94% |
| American Indian students | n/a |
| White students | 95% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 96% |
| Students with disabilities | 79% |
| Students without disabilities | 98% |
| Limited English proficient students | 93% |
| Proficient in English | 96% |
| Not migrant | 96% |
| All Students | 99% |
| Female students | 99% |
| Male students | 100% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 98% |
| Hispanic | 100% |
| White students | 100% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 99% |
| Students with disabilities | 97% |
| Students without disabilities | 100% |
| Limited English proficient students | 100% |
| Proficient in English | 99% |
| Not migrant | 99% |
| All Students | n/a |
| Female students | n/a |
| Male students | n/a |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | n/a |
| Hispanic | n/a |
| White students | n/a |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Students with disabilities | n/a |
| Students without disabilities | n/a |
| Limited English proficient students | n/a |
| Proficient in English | n/a |
| Not migrant | n/a |
| All Students | 99% |
| Female students | 100% |
| Male students | 99% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 99% |
| Hispanic | 100% |
| White students | 99% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 99% |
| Students with disabilities | 94% |
| Students without disabilities | 100% |
| Limited English proficient students | 100% |
| Proficient in English | 99% |
| Not migrant | 99% |
| All Students | 98% |
| Female students | 97% |
| Male students | 98% |
| Black students | n/a |
| Asian students | 99% |
| Hispanic | 96% |
| White students | 97% |
| Students identified as economically disadvantaged | n/a |
| Not economically disadvantaged | 98% |
| Students with disabilities | 88% |
| Students without disabilities | 99% |
| Limited English proficient students | 82% |
| Proficient in English | 98% |
| Not migrant | 98% |
In 2011-2012 Virginia used the Standards of Learning (SOL) End-of-Course tests to assess students in reading, writing, math, science and history/social science subjects at the end of each course, regardless of the student's grade level. The SOL End-of-Course tests are standards-based, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of Virginia. High school students must pass at least six SOL End-of-Course tests to graduate. The goal is for all students to pass the tests.
The different student groups are identified by the Virginia Department of Education. If there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.
See Virginia's state standards
Source: Virginia Department of Education
GreatSchools Ratings are based on the most recent standardized test results for schools. Use the breakdown ratings below to compare types of students at this school. Learn more »
EOC - All Grades
All students
Female
Male
All students
Asian students
Hispanic
White students
All students
Not economically disadvantaged
Students with disabilities
Students without disabilities
Limited English proficient students
Not limited English proficient
Not migrant
All students
| Ethnicity | This school | State average | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 77% | 57% | ||
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 18% | 6% | ||
| Hispanic | 3% | 9% | ||
| Black | 2% | 26% | ||
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 0% | 0% |
| This school | District average | State average | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Students eligible for free or reduced-price lunch program | 1% | N/A | 33% |
| This school | District average | State average | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Students per FTE teacher | 20 | N/A | 17 |
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