haynes academy louisiana

Students from the Haynes Academy School for Advanced Studies in Metairie had the highest average composite ACT score in Louisiana’s Class of 2022 with an average of 29.6 out of 36, putting them in the nation’s 92nd-percentile rank. The Louisiana School for Math, Science, and the Arts and Patrick F. Taylor Science & Technology Academy also made it in the top ninety percent of the nation’s ACT scores with average composite scores of 29.2 and 29, respectively. Additionally, Benjamin Franklin High School in New Orleans and Caddo Parish Magnet High School in Shreveport had average composite scores in the top eighty percent of ACT test takers in 2022.

In the 2022 graduating class, 41,815 Louisiana students took the ACT; their mean composite score was an 18.1 out of a possible 36. For comparison, 2019’s graduating class had about 10,000 more students take the exam and scored marginally higher, with a mean composite of 18.8. Nationally, the average composite score was a 19.8 in 2022 (down from 2020’s mean composite of 20.6).

(Top image caption – Haynes Academy School for Advanced Studies had the highest average 2022 ACT scores in Louisiana.)

What is a Good ACT Score? ACT College Readiness Benchmarks

The ACT’s “College Readiness Benchmarks” are the scores (out of 36) on the subject area tests that indicate a student’s chances of college success. The ACT believes that meeting the benchmarks for English, Reading, Mathematics, and Science gives a student a 50% chance of earning a B or higher or a 75% chance of getting a C or higher in a corresponding freshman-level college course. Unchanged since 2013, these benchmark scores and their college course equivalents are:

  • English (English Composition) – 18
  • Reading (Social Sciences) – 22
  • Math (College Algebra) – 22
  • Science (Biology) – 23

Since 2015, the ACT has also offered a College Readiness Benchmark for coursework in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math), based on scores on the Math & Science subject area tests. Because college-level STEM coursework tends to be more academically challenging (for instance, many STEM freshmen begin with Calculus instead of Algebra), ACT has determined that the benchmark ACT score is significantly higher for STEM than in other subject areas. Meeting the STEM benchmark indicates a 50% chance of earning a B or higher in identified college-level STEM courses. The benchmark score is: Math & Science (STEM) – 26

Louisiana ACT Requirements

Since 2013, Louisiana has offered the ACT for free to all high school juniors; this requirement means that Louisiana’s data is remarkably complete. In 2022, it was one of only 6 states where an estimated 100% of graduates took the ACT. Among these, it ranked under only Wyoming (19.2) and Tennessee (18.6), surpassing the scores of Alabama (18), Mississippi (17.8), and Nevada (17.3).

it tied with Oklahoma for third-lowest average score; only Mississippi (18.2) and Nevada (17.9) scored lower. (Utah had the highest scores, averaging a 20.2.)

In general, states with higher testing levels tend to have lower average scores. (They include results from students whose future plans may not include college-level coursework, for instance.)  In states where standardized testing like the ACT is optional, most test-takers are self-selecting and academically advanced, which is reflected in their test scores. For example, consider Massachusetts, which had one of the highest average ACT scores in the nation (26.5), but administered tests to only 9% of graduates.

Half of Louisiana’s Juniors are Not College-Ready

Louisiana’s Class of 2022 lags behind the national average for students meeting ACT College Readiness Benchmarks (CRBs) in all subject areas, continuing the trend highlighted in 2020 (table above). Under half of Louisiana students (45%) are prepared for college English (the only subject area in which Louisiana graduates are less than 10% behind the national average), and about one-third (31%) of students met the Reading benchmark. About one-fifth are college-ready in Math (19%) and Science (21%).

2022’s results continue a long-term trend of decreasing college-readiness among Louisiana seniors. Nearly half of all students (48%) failed to meet college benchmarks in all subject areas in 2020, up 2% from 2019 and up nearly 10% from seven years ago. Interestingly, the number of students who show college-readiness in all four subject areas has held relatively steady over the same period, suggesting that there is a widening achievement gap rather than just an overall worsening of scores.

Louisiana ACT Scores Reveal a Racial Achievement Gap

Sadly, one of the biggest indicators of ACT success is one over which students have no control: their racial background. Nationally, Asian Americans have the highest rates of success, followed by white students. Students who identify as Black or African American score the lowest, just behind students with American Indian heritage. (Students who identify as either Hispanic or Pacific Islander score somewhere in the middle.)

Louisiana’s 2020 results closely mirrored these nationwide trends. While 36% of white students and 49% of Asian students met three or more College Readiness Benchmarks, only 8% of Black graduates did so. Although the achievement gap between Black and white students has narrowed slightly over the past two years, this is almost wholly due to white students performing more poorly on the ACT, rather than a marked improvement in Black students’ scores.

This underperformance of Black students is particularly concerning because they make up nearly one third of Louisiana’s senior class (just behind white students, who comprise 45%). In other words, to close the achievement gap between white and Black graduates, Louisiana would need to improve the scores of nearly 5,000 Black students. (In contrast, to close the gap between white and Latino students, who make up a far smaller portion of the graduating class, just under 600 Latino graduates’ scores would need to show improvement.)

How to Improve ACT Scores

Luckily for students looking to increase their chances of ACT success, there are several actions they can take which are statistically likely to improve their scores.

  1. Focus on schoolwork and take academically challenging classes. Students who do better in school nearly always do better overall on standardized tests like the ACT. For instance, 2020 Louisiana graduates who took four years of high school English scored an average of 5.9 points better on the English ACT than those who had taken less than four years of English.
  2. Take the ACT more than once. There is a clear statistical advantage to retesting, even according to the ACT; in 2020, the average composite score of Louisiana students who took the ACT two or more times was 20.9, 5 points higher than the average composite score (15.9) of those who took the test only once. Students worried about the cost of retesting should consider ACT’s fee waiver program, which allows eligible students to test for free.
  3. Spend time studying and preparing specifically for the ACT. Taking practice tests helps students familiarize themselves with the content and the format of the test and gives them specific feedback. In addition, working with a tutor can be an effective way of improving a student’s weakest areas and developing test-taking strategies. Piqosity offers a full suite of free ACT Practice materials and analyses of previously-released ACT tests, perfect for students looking to increase their chances of ACT success.

Colleges in Louisiana are Popular and Affordable

More than half of Louisiana’s Class of 2022 aspire to postsecondary education, with over half of those aiming for a four-year bachelor’s degree. A majority of these college-bound students likely want to remain within the borders of the Pelican State, at least if they’re anything like the Class of 2019, who sent 70% of their ACT score reports to public in-state colleges.

Admission to some of these schools is an attainable goal—at the University of Louisiana-Lafayette and LSU-Shreveport, for instance, students are guaranteed admission with

  • an ACT English score of 18, and
  • an ACT Math Score of 19

In 2022, about half of graduates scored above an 18 on the English section of the ACT, and just over one fourth scored above a 19 on the Math section.

For students seeking more competitive entry, Tulane University offers admission to students with an ACT score of 31 or higher. (In 2020, just under 2,000 students passed this high bar.)

Louisiana’s colleges are also within the financial reach of many: all but two of the Top 20 Most Affordable Colleges in Louisiana have a yearly in-state tuition below $10,000.

Louisiana ACT Scores by High School

Wondering what the top Louisiana High Schools based on ACT scores are? The table below presents 2020 ACT Scores from 324 Louisiana high schools for which full data was available. Explore the original data from the Louisiana Department of Education here.

Top 10 Louisiana High Schools by 2020 Average ACT Scores (composite)

  1. Haynes Academy School for Advanced Studies (29.6)
  2. Louisiana School for Math, Science, and the Arts (29.2)
  3. Patrick F. Taylor Science & Technology Academy (29)
  4. Benjamin Franklin High School (26.7)
  5. Caddo Parish Magnet High School (25.9)
  6. Baton Rouge Magnet High School (25.8)
  7. Lusher Charter School (25.6)
  8. Early College Academy (25.5)
  9. LSU Laboratory School (25.2)
  10. Thomas Jefferson High School for Advanced Studies (24)

How to Read This Sortable Table

  • The default sort is by composite score from highest to lowest; to change the sorting order, click on the header by which you want to sort
  • “Avg Score” is the composite ACT score from 0 to 36
  • “# Tested” is the number of students who sat for the exam at each school

Louisiana ACT Scores 2023

wdt_ID School School District Avg Score # Tested
1 Church Point High School Acadia Parish 16.90 101
2 Crowley High School Acadia Parish 16.90 109
3 Midland High School Acadia Parish 17.30 56
4 Rayne High School Acadia Parish 17.60 140
5 Iota High School Acadia Parish 19.40 142
6 AMIKids Acadiana Juvenile Site 0.00 0
7 Elizabeth High School Allen Parish 18.30 24
8 Fairview High School Allen Parish 17.50 17
9 Kinder High School Allen Parish 18.70 95
10 Oakdale High School Allen Parish 18.80 53
11 Oberlin High School Allen Parish 17.10 29
12 Reeves High School Allen Parish 0.00 0
13 Donaldsonville High School Ascension Parish 15.10 95
14 East Ascension High School Ascension Parish 18.20 403
15 St. Amant High School Ascension Parish 19.80 512
16 Dutchtown High School Ascension Parish 21.20 592
17 Assumption High School Assumption Parish 16.80 184
18 Bunkie Magnet High School Avoyelles Parish 16.30 102
19 Marksville High School Avoyelles Parish 14.20 72
20 Avoyelles High School Avoyelles Parish 14.80 88
21 LA School for Ag Science Avoyelles Parish 19.80 67
22 DeRidder High School Beauregard Parish 17.80 160
23 East Beauregard High School Beauregard Parish 17.50 41
24 Merryville High School Beauregard Parish 17.30 32
25 Singer High School Beauregard Parish 15.90 14
School School District Avg Score # Tested

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