🏫 School Analysis β€” Menlo Park Area

A rigorous, data-driven comparison of 20+ schools within ~10 miles of Menlo Park, CA. For 3rd grade and middle school entry points.

Compiled March 2026 Β· Sources cited inline Β· Methodology

Contents

Executive Overview

This analysis covers 20+ schools across 4 categories: elite private (6-12), smaller private/alternative (K-8), public (MPCSD & Las Lomitas), and the destination high school (M-A). Every claim is sourced. Where data is unavailable, that absence is noted β€” a school's refusal to publish outcome data tells you something.

The Three Questions Nobody Answers

School brochures give you test scores, teacher ratios, and campus photos. They never answer the three questions that actually matter for a rational decision:

πŸ’° 1. What's the real cost? (It's not tuition.)

Private school tuition is capital that could be compounding in the S&P 500. Nueva K-12 costs $669K in tuition but $3.28 million in foregone market returns by age 28. Even a 7-year stint at Menlo School ($65K/yr) represents $1.87M in opportunity cost. Sacred Heart at $47K/yr is the "cheapest" elite private β€” still $1.38M foregone. Meanwhile, MPCSD public schools cost $0 in tuition, score 75-84% on CAASPP math (vs 34% state avg), and La Entrada (Las Lomitas) at 83% math proficiency outperforms every MPCSD school. Full analysis β†’

πŸŽ“ 2. Do expensive schools actually send more kids to better colleges?

The uncomfortable answer: not obviously. CDE College-Going Rate data shows public Carlmont High sends 18.8% of graduates to UC (109 of 580) β€” a higher rate than the self-reported numbers from most private schools. Palo Alto High: 16.2%. Gunn: 14.1% with the highest overall college-going rate (91.2%). Private schools don't report to CDE, so we're comparing their polished marketing claims against audited public data. Menlo School claims 30 Stanford admits over 3 years. Harker's 1514 avg SAT and ~10% HYPSM rate is the strongest on paper. But Carlmont does it for free. Full analysis β†’

☠️ 3. What does the commute actually cost in safety?

Nobody includes commute mortality risk in school evaluations. They should. Using county-specific FARS fatality data: Harker accumulates 110.9 micromorts per year (a micromort = 1-in-a-million chance of death). Over K-12, that's a 1-in-900 chance of a fatal accident just driving to school β€” equivalent to 158 skydiving jumps or smoking 792 cigarettes. Harker's rate is 65Γ— higher than Menlo School (1.7 Β΅Mort/yr) because US-101 through Santa Clara County is the 3rd deadliest highway stretch in the US. The route matters more than the distance: GISSV via 101 accumulates nearly 4Γ— the risk of Nueva via I-280, despite only 25% more distance. Local schools (Menlo School, Sacred Heart, MPCSD) are effectively zero risk β€” the equivalent of 6-9 cigarettes over 7 years. Full analysis β†’

Traditional Findings

Quick Comparison Tables

Elite Private Schools (6-12)

SchoolTypeTuitionStudentsS:TClassAP?Math LevelAid %DiversityCommute
CastillejaGirls 6-12$62,4004266:114No (AT)MV Calc, LinAlg20%75% POC~5 min
Menlo SchoolCoed 6-12$64,7188058:118No (2024+)Adv Calc II21%55% POC~3 min
Sacred HeartCatholic PK-12$47,8261,2168:11528 APAP Calc AB/BC30%15% POC~3 min
Notre Dame BelmontGirls 9-12$32,430~60014:12819 APAP Calc, AP StatsN/AN/A~15 min
Crystal SpringsCoed 6-12~$65,0005688:114No (Honors)UnknownN/AN/A~20 min
NuevaGifted PK-12$66,9609306.5:115-18NoComplex Analysis20%N/A~20 min

Smaller Private & Alternative Schools

SchoolTypeGradesTuitionStudentsS:TMath ApproachNotable
PeninsulaProgressivePreK-8$35,680~240~8:1ConstructivistFounded 1925, play-based
Phillips BrooksCoedPreK-5$46,4922967.5:1DifferentiatedEnds at 5th β€” need new school
WoodlandCoedPreK-8~$38-42K3259:1Not publishedPortola Valley, outdoor focus
KeysCoedK-8~$43,800168~9:1ExperientialTiny; published HS placement
GISSVGerman BilingualPreK-12$26-34K~450<20:1German curriculumDual diploma (Abitur + CA)
INTL (Alto)IB WorldPreK-12~$38,470720~11:1IB frameworkTrilingual (Fr/De/Zh)
PinewoodCoedK-12$47-59K6007:1Specialist teachers K-1217 AP, SAT avg 1314
HarkerCoedK-12$52-67K2,0009:1Elite (MATHCOUNTS, AMC)SAT 1514, ~10% HYPSM
NativityCatholicPreK-8~$10-16K~225~17:1Standard diocesanParish school, low cost

Public Schools (CAASPP 2023-24)

SchoolDistrictGradesStudentsS:TELA %Math %FRL %Rating
La EntradaLas Lomitas4-861215.9:185.9%83.3%6.9%10/10
Oak KnollMPCSDK-557418.8:181.6%84.1%5.7%10/10
LaurelMPCSDK-565817.6:179.2%82.4%12.6%10/10
HillviewMPCSD6-884615.5:179.8%75.7%11.2%10/10
EncinalMPCSDK-560415.4:175.3%74.8%15.6%10/10
M-A HighSequoia Union9-122,15817.9:172.0%54.3%33.0%Top 20%
State averages: ELA ~47%, Math ~34%. All MPCSD schools are Top 5% statewide.

Elite Private Schools (6-12)

Castilleja School

Girls Only Grades 6-12

Palo Alto Β· Founded 1907 Β· castilleja.org

$62,400
Tuition
426
Students
6:1
S:T Ratio
14
Avg Class
~20-25%
Accept Rate
75%
Students of Color

Academics & Math

No AP curriculum β€” uses proprietary "Advanced Topics" (AT) courses. Students can sit for AP exams: 93% scored 3+, 79% scored 4 or 5 (2025). Math offerings through Multivariable Calculus and Linear Algebra β€” exceptional depth for a 426-student school. Honors tracks available from Algebra II onward. Award-winning FIRST Robotics team (Gatorbotics, Team 1700). No specific MATHCOUNTS/AMC teams found. Source: School Profile PDF

College Matriculation

Class of 2025 (~51 graduates): 97% enroll in 4-year colleges. Acceptances include Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duke, Georgetown, Northwestern, UPenn, MIT, UC Berkeley, UCLA. All 8 Ivy League schools represented. For a class of 51, this is remarkable penetration. Source

Funding

~$75M endowment. $198M campus expansion underway (partly funded by $106M in bonds). 20% of students receive tuition assistance ($7,500-$65,250 awards). $4M+ annual FA budget. Need-blind admissions. Source

Entry Points

Grade 6 and Grade 9 are primary entry points. ISEE required. Application via Ravenna, January deadline. Source

Unique Features

Best case against: All-girls limits co-ed socialization. Tiny class (~51) means fewer courses, limited athletics, narrow social circle. $198M construction disrupting campus. Historic neighbor disputes over expansion. No traditional AP transcripts (though AP exam results suggest this doesn't hurt college outcomes).

Menlo School

Coed 6-12

Atherton Β· Founded 1915 Β· menloschool.org

$64,718
Tuition
805
Students
8:1
S:T Ratio
18
Avg Class
$7.9M
FA Budget
5
Nat'l Merit '26

Academics & Math

Discontinued AP in August 2024 β€” replaced with 79 advanced/honors courses. Math through Advanced Calculus II (Honors) and Advanced Topics in Math (Honors). Also offers Applied Statistics & Epidemiology, Probability & Statistics (H), and Intro to Applied Math & Data Science. Multiple honors tracks with clear differentiation. School emphasis is Mock Trial (national champions 2014, 2019, 2023; 80-0 county record 2011-2018) over math competitions. Source: School Profile

College Matriculation (2023-2025, 3-year)

The most transparent data of any school on this list. Stanford: 30. UC Berkeley: 20. U Chicago: 17. Northwestern: 10. WashU: 11. Harvard: 7, Cornell: 9, Dartmouth: 8. MIT: 3. Williams: 4, Wellesley: 6. For a school of ~143 graduates/year, the Stanford pipeline is extraordinary. Source

Funding

Endowment estimated $100M+ (not officially disclosed). $7.9M FA budget (up from $7.3M). 20-21% receive financial aid. Meets 100% of demonstrated need. Grants reduce tuition 11-99%. Need-blind admissions. Source

Unique Features

Best case against: Largest class size on this list (18). Most expensive ($64,718). Dropped AP β€” concerns about transcript recognition. 2023 student newspaper exposed sexual harassment/assault culture concerns. Heavy Stanford-feeder identity may create narrow expectations.

Sacred Heart Preparatory

Catholic PK-12

Atherton Β· Founded 1898 Β· shschools.org

$47,826
Tuition (9-12)
1,216
Students
8:1
S:T Ratio
28 AP
AP Courses
25%
Accept Rate
63 acres
Campus

Academics

The only school on this list still fully committed to AP. 28 AP courses + 20 honors sections. 4 years of religious studies required. 89% of prep faculty hold advanced degrees. Traditional college prep model. $12.2M in scholarship earnings for Class of 2025 (160 graduates). Known placements at Stanford, UC Berkeley, USC, UCLA, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Boston College. Source

Funding

Tuition is lowest among elite privates. 30% of students on financial aid. $101M capital campaign (2008). 63-acre campus β€” largest on this list by far. Campbell Building (2019, 79K sq ft), Homer Science Center (LEED Platinum), Olympic pool. Source

Unique Features

Best case against: Only 15% students of color β€” significantly less diverse than every other school analyzed. 4-year religious studies requirement may not suit secular families. Largest school (1,216) = less intimate. Less published college placement data than Menlo/Castilleja. Athletics-heavy culture may not suit every student. Source

Notre Dame High School, Belmont

Girls 9-12 Catholic

1540 Ralston Ave, Belmont Β· ndhsb.org

$32,430
Tuition (incl. lunch)
~600
Students
14:1
S:T Ratio
28
Avg Class Size
19 AP
AP Courses
Platinum
AP Honor Roll

Academics

19 AP courses and 18 Honors courses. AP Honor Roll Platinum designation (2nd consecutive year, upgraded from Gold in 2023). In May 2025, 212 students took 439 exams across 20 subjects; 71% scored 3+. 100% pass rate on 3D Art Design, Chinese Language, Macro Economics, and Spanish Language AP exams. College Board AP CS Female Diversity Award for expanding women's access to AP CSP. One of the only high schools in the country offering university-structured science labs (full-length class + full-length lab block). Source

Unique Features

S&P 500 Opportunity Cost (4 years, 9-12)

$32,430/yr Γ— 4 years = $129,720 in tuition. With S&P 500 compounding at historical avg 10.5% to age 28: ~$492K in foregone returns. This is roughly 1/3 the opportunity cost of a Nueva K-12 pipeline ($3.28M) and less than Sacred Heart 7-year ($1.38M). Among the most affordable private options on this list after Nativity.

Best case against: 14:1 student-teacher ratio and 28-student class sizes are the highest on this list β€” comparable to public schools, not the 6:1 to 8:1 at elite independents. Girls-only limits the applicant pool (only relevant if you have daughters). Limited public college placement data. Religious curriculum (Catholic) may not suit all families. Located in Belmont (~15 min from Menlo Park) β€” not walkable. Less academic prestige/recognition than Castilleja (the other girls' school) despite strong AP program. Diversity data not publicly available. Source

Crystal Springs Uplands

Coed 6-12

Hillsborough Β· crystal.org

~$65,000
Tuition
568
Students
8:1
S:T Ratio
~28%
Accept Rate
Niche #19
US Ranking
100%
4-yr College (since 2016)

Academics

No longer offers AP β€” replaced with designed Honors courses. 100% four-year university admission since 2016. Niche #19 nationally, #6 in California. Graduation requirements exceed UC admission requirements. Specific math course sequence not publicly available. Source

Best case against: Least publicly available data of any school on this list β€” tuition, diversity, financial aid, math curriculum, college lists, endowment are all unpublished or hard to find. This opacity makes it difficult to evaluate rigorously. Located in Hillsborough (~20 min from Menlo Park). Lower public profile than Castilleja/Menlo/Nueva.

The Nueva School

Gifted PK-12

Hillsborough & San Mateo Β· Founded 1967 Β· nuevaschool.org

$66,960
Tuition (9-12)
930
Students
6.5:1
S:T Ratio
$8.6M
FA Budget
USAMO
Math Level
~10%
Nat'l Merit (2019)

Academics & Math

Purpose-built for gifted learners. Requires IQ testing for admission. Math through Multivariable Calculus and Complex Analysis β€” the highest math ceiling of any school on this list. Out-of-grade acceleration explicitly available. Students have won the U.S. Mathematical Olympiad and competed at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO). Girls x Math mentoring chapter. MathWorks Math Modeling Challenge finalists. Average SAT: 1514 Read/Write: 743, Math: 760. Average ACT: 34/36. ~10% of senior class won National Merit Scholarships (2019). Source

Funding & Aid

Most expensive school ($66,960 upper). But also most generous aid: $8.6M annual budget. Free tuition for families under $150K. Families $150-250K pay 1-10% of income. 100% of demonstrated need met with grants (no loans). 20% of students receive aid. Source

Unique Features

Best case against: IQ testing requirement is a gatekeeping barrier β€” not all bright kids test "gifted." Most expensive school on this list. Athletics rated C+ by Niche β€” weakest sports. Young high school (first class graduated ~2018) = limited alumni network. No AP, no letter grades until 10th grade β€” extremely non-traditional. Two-campus model means upper schoolers are in San Mateo (different vibe). "Gifted" label can create identity pressure. 20-25 min commute from Menlo Park.

Smaller Private & Alternative Schools

The Harker School ⭐

Coed K-12

San Jose Β· Founded 1893 Β· harker.org

$52-67K
Tuition
~2,000
Students
9:1
S:T Ratio
27 AP
AP Courses
1514
Avg SAT
$9.8M
FA Budget

Academics & Math

Nationally elite math program. MATHCOUNTS team consistently wins Santa Clara Valley chapter (considered the toughest in the nation). Multiple perfect scores. Students regularly qualify for AIME and USAMO. 27 AP courses. Performance placement (ability grouping) at most grade levels. AP exam results: 91% scored 4 or 5. Average SAT: 1514. Average ACT: 32. Source

College Matriculation (2022-2024)

~10% HYPSM, ~35% top-25. Over 3 years (~515 graduates): Stanford: 31, MIT: 16, plus Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, UPenn. 100% graduation rate. Source

Funding

$9.8M financial aid budget. $11M endowment (relatively small for school's size). Aid available K-12, awards up to $64,300. Tuition includes lunch and shuttle between campuses. Source

Best case against: Pressure cooker culture. High stress, heavy homework, intense competition. ~65-70% Asian/Asian-American β€” limited racial diversity. 25-35 min commute from Menlo Park to San Jose each way β€” major daily quality-of-life cost. 2,000 students can feel impersonal. Optimizes for college admissions metrics rather than genuine intellectual curiosity. $67K tuition for upper school.

Peninsula School

Progressive PreK-8

Menlo Park Β· Founded 1925 Β· peninsulaschool.org

$35,680
Tuition
~240
Students
~8:1
S:T Ratio
25%
On Aid

One of the oldest progressive schools on the West Coast. Child-led, play-based, experiential learning. Multi-age classrooms in some divisions. Strong arts, woodworking, and outdoor programs. Constructivist math approach β€” no published data on ability grouping, acceleration, or competition teams. No published placement data, no standardized test scores, no formal metrics. Need-blind admission. Source

Best case against: Progressive model de-emphasizes grades, testing, and traditional metrics. Some parents report graduates need to "catch up" academically for rigorous high schools. The lack of any published outcome data makes it impossible to evaluate rigorously. If you want math acceleration, this is not the school.

Phillips Brooks School

Coed PreK-5

Menlo Park Β· Founded 1978 Β· phillipsbrooks.org

$46,492
Tuition (K-5)
296
Students
7.5:1
S:T Ratio

Strong SEL focus. Differentiated, developmentally appropriate learning. Graduates described as "sought after by middle schools." Known as a feeder to Hillbrook, Keys, Nueva, Menlo. No published formal placement list. No math competition teams (school ends at 5th grade). Source

Best case against: Ends at 5th grade β€” families face a second school transition. ~$46K for elementary only, with no middle school. SEL-heavy focus may come at the expense of academic intensity in core subjects.

Keys School

Coed K-8

Palo Alto Β· Founded ~1970 Β· keysschool.org

~$43,800
Tuition
168
Students

Very small school (~15-20 per grade). Published HS placement data: graduates attend Castilleja, Crystal Springs, Harker, Menlo, Nueva, Sacred Heart, Paly, M-A. Alumni college placements include Harvard, Stanford, Cornell, Duke, Brown. Full-time High School Search Consultant. IDEAS Lab in middle school. Strong DEIJ emphasis. Source

Best case against: Extremely small (~168 total). Limits course variety, peer diversity, extracurricular options (no competitive sports). ~$44K for a small-school experience without the resources of larger institutions.

Woodland School

Coed PreK-8

Portola Valley Β· Founded 1981 Β· woodland-school.org

~$38-42K
Tuition (est.)
325
Students
9:1
S:T Ratio

10.5-acre pastoral campus in Portola Valley. House System (cross-grade community building). Strong outdoor education. 17 athletic teams. Visual and performing arts at every grade. ISEE/SSAT required. Tuition is behind an inquiry wall β€” not published. Math curriculum, competition teams, and placement data also not published. Source

Best case against: Portola Valley location means narrow, winding roads for commute. Middle school cohorts shrink to 14-17 students, severely limiting peer variety and elective options. School is notably opaque about tuition and outcomes.

Pinewood School

Coed K-12

Los Altos Hills (lower) & Los Altos (upper) Β· Founded 1959 Β· pinewood.edu

$47-59K
Tuition
~600
Students
7:1
S:T Ratio
17 AP
AP Courses
1314
Avg SAT
86%
AP 4+

Every subject taught by a specialist teacher from K-12 β€” unusual for elementary. 17 AP courses. 42% of graduates to top-50 universities, ~13% HYPSM. SAT avg 1314 (good but well below Harker's 1514 or Nueva's 760 math). All K-6 students have daily PE. Pinewood Scholars Program (social entrepreneurship capstone). Source

Best case against: Solid but not elite β€” SAT 1314 and FindingSchool A- rating place it below top-tier peers. "Well-rounded" emphasis means less academic intensity for students wanting maximum rigor. Two-campus transition (K-6 β†’ 7-12). Can feel socially insular.

German International School of SV (GISSV)

German Bilingual PreK-12

Mountain View Β· gissv.org

$26-34K
Tuition
~450
Students

Full German-English dual immersion. Rigorous German (Thuringian) math curriculum. MINT (STEM) designated school. Graduates earn dual diplomas: German International Abitur + CA High School Diploma β€” opens doors to tuition-free European universities. German three-track system (Gymnasium/Realschule/Hauptschule) sorts students at end of grade 5. No US college placement data published. Source

Best case against: If your child doesn't want to be bilingual in German, this makes no sense. Three-track sorting at age 10-11 feels limiting. No US college outcome data published. Mountain View location (~20 min). Converted public school campus, not purpose-built.

Silicon Valley International School (INTL)

IB World PreK-12

Palo Alto & Menlo Park Β· siliconvalleyinternational.org

~$38,470
Tuition
720
Students

Full IB World School (PYP, MYP, Diploma Programme). Trilingual education: English + French, German, or Mandarin Chinese. Created from 2021 merger of ISTP + Alto International. Accredited by WASC, CAIS, French Ministry of Education, and German DSD. No college placement data published. Source

Best case against: Multiple name changes and a recent merger suggest organizational instability. Bilingual instruction can challenge English-dominant learners. Two-campus model fragments community. No published outcome data.

Nativity School

Catholic PreK-8

Menlo Park Β· Niche listing

~$10-16K
Tuition (est.)
~225
Students

Catholic faith-based education. Standard diocesan curriculum. Likely the most affordable private option in the area at roughly 1/4 the cost of elite independents. Web presence and published data are minimal. Graduates likely attend Sacred Heart, Menlo, Serra, Mercy, and local publics.

Best case against: Minimal published data. Smaller budgets mean fewer specialist teachers, less technology, fewer extracurriculars. Academic rigor and differentiation are limited compared to $40-65K independents. Religious curriculum required. Nearly impossible to evaluate from the outside.

Public Schools β€” MPCSD & Las Lomitas

Menlo Park City School District (MPCSD)

Superintendent: Kristen Gracia Β· 4 schools (3 elem + 1 middle) Β· mpcsd.org

2,685
Students
$27,367
Revenue/Student
79% ELA
District CAASPP
78% Math
District CAASPP
#33
of 1,907 CA Districts
10/10
All Schools Rated

Math Curriculum & Acceleration

K-5: Math Expressions (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) + DreamBox adaptive online platform. Member of SVMI (Silicon Valley Mathematics Initiative).

6-8: Big Ideas (Ron Larson & Laurie Boswell).

Acceleration pathway: Starts in 5th grade with optional 5/6A Compacted Math (covers 5th + 1/3 of 6th). At Hillview: Math 6/7 Compacted β†’ Math 7/8 Compacted β†’ Algebra 1 in 8th grade. Multiple entry points throughout middle school. No formal GATE program β€” uses differentiation, compaction, and adaptive tools instead. Source

District Finances

Total revenue: $74.2M. 86% from local sources (property tax, parcel taxes, philanthropy). Per-pupil spending ~$26,717 β€” 30-40% above state average. Measure B (2021) renewed parcel tax with $192.50 increase. AAA credit rating for GO bonds. 89% of budget goes to salaries/benefits. Board cut $3M+ since 2017 for fiscal balance. Source

District Test Score Trends

YearMath %ELA %Notes
202378%81%Near recovery
202276%80%Post-COVID rebound
202150%50%COVID (partial testing)
201982%83%Pre-COVID peak
2016-1880-81%80-82%Stable

Demographics (NCES 2024-25)

Ethnicity%
White~46%
Hispanic~21%
Asian~19%
Two or More~13%
Black~1%
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged~11%

Community Notes

Elementary Schools (K-5)

Encinal Elementary

195 Encinal Ave, Atherton Β· 604 students Β· 15.4:1 ratio Β· encinal.mpcsd.org

CAASPP: ELA 75.3%, Math 74.8% (lowest of three MPCSD elementaries but still Top 5% statewide). Most diverse MPCSD elementary β€” 29% Hispanic, 36% White. 15.6% FRL eligible. 3rd grade: 80% Math, 78% ELA. Likely your assigned elementary based on Menlo Park geography. Source

Oak Knoll Elementary

1895 Oak Knoll Ln, Menlo Park Β· 574 students Β· 18.8:1 ratio Β· oakknoll.mpcsd.org

CAASPP: ELA 81.6%, Math 84.1% (highest in MPCSD). 5th grade: 87% Math, 86% ELA β€” exceptional. Least diverse: 57% White, 10.5% Hispanic, 5.7% FRL. Serves affluent Sharon Heights/Oak Knoll area. Source

Laurel Elementary

95 Edge Rd, Atherton Β· 658 students Β· 17.6:1 ratio Β· laurel.mpcsd.org

CAASPP: ELA 79.2%, Math 82.4%. Most balanced demographics of the three: 39% White, 23% Hispanic, 23% Asian. Highest ELA in 5th grade (85%). Ranked #1 in MPCSD by PublicSchoolReview for combined scores. Source

Middle Schools (6-8)

Hillview Middle School (MPCSD)

1100 Elder Ave, Menlo Park Β· 846 students Β· 15.5:1 ratio Β· hillview.mpcsd.org

CAASPP: ELA 79.8%, Math 75.7%. Algebra 1 available in 8th grade via compaction pathway. Big Ideas curriculum. 56.5% of students exceeded math standards. The only MPCSD middle school β€” all three elementaries feed here. 50.5% White, 20% Hispanic. 11.2% FRL. Source

La Entrada Middle School (Las Lomitas) ⭐

2200 Sharon Rd, Menlo Park Β· Grades 4-8 Β· 612 students Β· 15.9:1 ratio Β· le.llesd.org

85.9%
ELA
83.3%
Math
64.9%
Exceeded Math

Highest-performing middle school in the area β€” outperforms Hillview on both ELA (+6%) and Math (+7.6%). 7th grade: 88.6% ELA, 83.3% Math. Creative arts integration focus. Grades 4-8 structure allows longer-term relationships. Not in MPCSD β€” Las Lomitas district only (Atherton/West Menlo Park boundaries). 47% White, 21% Asian, 17% Hispanic. 6.9% FRL β€” more affluent than Hillview. Source

High School: Menlo-Atherton

Menlo-Atherton High School

Public 9-12

555 Middlefield Rd, Atherton Β· Sequoia Union HSD Β· Founded 1951 Β· mabears.org

2,158
Students
72%
ELA Proficient
54.3%
Math Proficient
~19-24
AP Courses
92%
Grad Rate
33%
FRL

The Demographic Shift

M-A draws from a much wider catchment than MPCSD feeders. Demographics shift dramatically:

MPCSDM-A High
Hispanic~21%42.5%
White~46%34.6%
Asian~19%8.3%
FRL~11%33.0%

This is because M-A also draws from East Palo Alto (Ravenswood), Redwood City, and other communities. The school's motto is "Strength in Diversity."

AP & Outcomes

~19-24 AP courses. 77% AP pass rate (3+), 41% scored 5 β€” the 41% scoring 5 is excellent and suggests well-prepared students at the top end. 97% continue education (60% to 4-year, 37% to 2-year). Schedule: modified block (3 days 50-min, 2 block days 85-min). Source

College Counseling

No UC admission data published. USDOE National Blue Ribbon School. California Distinguished School (2007, 2013). Newsweek #259 best US school (2005). AVID program for underrepresented students.

Culture & Athletics

60+ athletic teams, 46% participation. PAL Commissioner's Cup (11+ consecutive years). Professional 492-seat theater. Advanced Jazz Ensemble (travels to Montreux). Notable alumni: Lindsey Buckingham & Stevie Nicks (Fleetwood Mac), Bob Weir (Grateful Dead), Ruth Porat (Alphabet CFO), Troy Franklin (NFL).

Recent Issues

Key insight: M-A's 54% math proficiency masks a bimodal distribution. The top-track students (41% of AP test-takers scoring 5) are very well served. The school-wide average is dragged down by the much more diverse and lower-income catchment beyond MPCSD. For a student coming from Hillview's compaction track, the experience at M-A will look very different from the average. The question is whether you want your child in that bimodal environment or in a more homogeneous private school.

Math Differentiation Deep-Dive

This is the question that separates schools most clearly. "How do you handle a kid who's ahead in math?" reveals more about a school's philosophy than any marketing materials.

SchoolHighest Math OfferedAcceleration PolicyCompetition CultureApproach
Nueva Complex Analysis Explicit out-of-grade acceleration USAMO winners, IMO competitors Built for gifted learners
Harker AP Calc BC + beyond Performance placement at all levels MATHCOUNTS champs, AMC/AIME/USAMO Ability grouping K-12
Castilleja MV Calc, Linear Algebra Honors tracks; AT courses for advanced FIRST Robotics (strong) Differentiated within grade
Menlo Adv Calc II (H), Adv Topics Multiple honors tracks Mock Trial focus (not math) Differentiated within grade
Sacred Heart AP Calc AB/BC Standard AP track Not published Traditional course sequence
Pinewood AP Calc BC Specialist teachers K-12 Not published Traditional + specialists
GISSV German Abitur math Three-track system at grade 5 Different ecosystem German curriculum (rigorous)
Hillview (public) Algebra 1 (8th grade) Compaction pathway from 5th None known Compaction, no GATE
La Entrada (public) Likely Algebra 1 (8th) Similar compaction None known Arts-integrated
Peninsula Not published Not published None Progressive/constructivist
Keys/Woodland Not published Not published None Experiential/SEL focus
Bottom line: If math acceleration is a priority, there are really only two tiers. Tier 1: Nueva and Harker β€” purpose-built for math-advanced kids, with competition pipelines and college-level coursework. Tier 2: Castilleja and Menlo β€” strong honors tracks through MV Calc/Linear Algebra but without dedicated competition culture. Everyone else is either standard pacing with some differentiation (public schools, Sacred Heart) or philosophically opposed to acceleration (progressive schools).

Outcome Metrics

College Matriculation Transparency Ranking

One of the most revealing metrics is which schools publish their data vs. which hide it. Schools that don't publish placement data are telling you something β€” either their outcomes don't match their tuition, or they've decided transparency isn't in their interest.

SchoolData Published?HighlightTransparency Rating
Menlo Full 3-year matriculation list 30 to Stanford in 3 years ⬀⬀⬀⬀⬀
Harker Full matriculation + SAT/ACT/AP stats ~10% HYPSM, SAT 1514 ⬀⬀⬀⬀⬀
Castilleja Acceptances listed (not matriculations) All 8 Ivies from 51-student class ⬀⬀⬀⬀○
Pinewood % to top-50 published 42% top-50, ~13% HYPSM ⬀⬀⬀○○
Sacred Heart Scholarship total only ($12.2M) No specific college lists ⬀⬀○○○
Nueva SAT/ACT averages only SAT 760 Math, ACT 34 ⬀⬀○○○
Crystal Springs "100% to 4-year since 2016" No specific colleges listed ⬀○○○○
GISSV / INTL Nothing published β€” β—‹β—‹β—‹β—‹β—‹
Keys (K-8) HS placement list published Graduates β†’ Castilleja, Menlo, Harker, etc. ⬀⬀⬀⬀○

Standardized Test Comparisons

SchoolMetricScoreContext
HarkerAvg SAT151497th percentile nationally
NuevaAvg SAT Math76099th percentile math
PinewoodAvg SAT131490th percentile
CastillejaAP 4+5 rate79%From 104 test-takers
HarkerAP 4+5 rate91%Highest on this list
SHPAP courses28Most traditional AP
M-A HighAP 5 rate41%Strong top-end despite mixed overall

Funding & Resources

SchoolTuition/CostFA Budget% on AidEndowment
MPCSD (public)Free ($27K/student public)N/AN/AN/A (parcel tax funded)
Nativity~$10-16KUnknownUnknownN/A
GISSV$26-34KUnknownUnknownN/A
Peninsula$35,680~14% of revenue25%N/A
INTL~$38,470UnknownUnknownN/A
Woodland~$38-42K (est.)~$900K (est.)~11%N/A
Keys~$43,800UnknownUnknownN/A
PBS$46,492UnknownUnknownN/A
Pinewood$47-59KUnknown~25%N/A
Sacred Heart$47,826Unknown30%$101M campaign (2008)
Crystal Springs~$65,000UnknownUnknownN/A
Harker$52-67K$9.8MUnknown$11M
Castilleja$62,400$4M+20%~$75M
Menlo$64,718$7.9M21%Est. $100M+
Nueva$66,960$8.6M20%Unknown (large)

Note on Nueva's generosity: Free tuition for families under $150K. Families $150-250K pay 1-10% of income. This effectively makes Nueva accessible to a wider socioeconomic range than its sticker price suggests. Source

πŸ’° The S&P 500 Alternative: What If You Invested the Tuition Instead?

Private school tuition is not just a yearly expense. It's capital that could be compounding in the market. This section calculates the opportunity cost of private school tuition invested in an S&P 500 index fund instead, at two milestones: high school graduation (age 18) and age 28 (when early career outcomes are measurable).

This is not an argument against private school. Education returns are real but hard to quantify. This is the financial cost you're implicitly paying on top of tuition β€” the growth your money would have earned.

Assumptions

Scenario A: Enter at 6th Grade (Middle School)

Schools that start at 6th grade: 7 years for 6-12 schools, 3 years for K-8 schools (6th-8th only). K-8 students then attend free public high school; their investment compounds untouched for 4 more years before graduation.

School Annual Tuition Years Total Paid S&P at Graduation S&P at Age 28
Nueva (PK-12) $66,960 7 $468,720 $712,830 $1,934,678
Menlo School (6-12) $64,718 7 $453,026 $688,963 $1,869,900
Castilleja (6-12) $62,400 7 $436,800 $664,286 $1,802,926
Harker (K-12) $60,000 7 $420,000 $638,737 $1,733,583
Pinewood (K-12) $53,000 7 $371,000 $564,217 $1,531,331
Crystal Springs (6-12) $65,000 7 $343,770 $522,806 $1,418,937
Sacred Heart (PK-12) $47,826 7 $334,782 $509,137 $1,381,839
INTL / Alto (PK-12) $38,470 7 $269,290 $409,537 $1,111,515
GISSV (PK-12) $30,000 7 $210,000 $319,368 $866,791
Keys (K-8) then public HS $43,800 3 $131,400 $160,976 $651,379
Woodland (PreK-8) then public HS $40,000 3 $120,000 $147,010 $594,867
Peninsula (PreK-8) then public HS $35,680 3 $107,040 $131,133 $530,621
Nativity (PreK-8) then public HS $13,000 3 $39,000 $47,778 $193,332

Scenario B: Enter at 3rd Grade

Only applicable to schools accepting 3rd graders (PK-12, K-12, K-8 schools). 6-12 schools like Castilleja, Menlo, and Crystal Springs don't offer 3rd grade β€” see Scenario A only. K-8 students switch to free public high school after 8th; their investment compounds untouched through graduation.

School Annual Tuition Years Total Paid S&P at Graduation S&P at Age 28
Nueva (PK-12) $66,960 10 $669,600 $1,207,869 $3,278,253
Harker (K-12) $60,000 10 $600,000 $1,082,320 $2,937,503
Pinewood (K-12) $53,000 10 $530,000 $956,049 $2,594,794
Sacred Heart (PK-12) $47,826 10 $478,260 $862,717 $2,341,484
INTL / Alto (PK-12) $38,470 10 $384,700 $693,947 $1,883,429
GISSV (PK-12) $30,000 10 $300,000 $541,160 $1,468,751
Keys (K-8) then public HS $43,800 6 $262,800 $378,171 $1,530,241
Phillips Brooks (PreK-5) then public 6-12 $46,492 3 $139,476 $170,870 $932,878
Woodland (PreK-8) then public HS $40,000 6 $240,000 $345,361 $1,397,480
Peninsula (PreK-8) then public HS $35,680 6 $214,080 $308,062 $1,246,552
Nativity (PreK-8) then public HS $13,000 6 $78,000 $112,242 $454,181

What This Means

$1.8M
Castilleja (6-12) at Age 28
$3.3M
Nueva (3rd-12th) at Age 28
$2.9M
Harker (3rd-12th) at Age 28
$454K
Nativity (3rd-8th) at Age 28

The headline numbers are sobering. Sending a child to Nueva from 3rd grade through 12th means foregoing $3.3 million in potential market returns by the time they turn 28. That's not a tuition bill β€” it's a trust fund. Castilleja at $1.8M and Menlo at $1.9M aren't far behind.

But the numbers need context:

Formula: Future Value of Annuity Due. Each year's tuition is invested at the start of the school year at 10.5% annual return. After the final school year, the balance compounds without additional contributions through age 28. FV = Σ[PMT × (1.105)(n-i)] for i=1 to n, then × (1.105)(years remaining to age 28).

πŸŽ“ UC Admissions & College Outcomes

The Data Exists β€” And It's Public

Contrary to what most school guides claim, the University of California does publish per-school admissions data. The UC Information Center's "Admissions by Source School" dashboard shows applicants, admits, and enrollees from every high school in California β€” going back nearly 30 years. The UC Accountability Report (2025) provides systemwide context. The data is public. We also obtained actual UC enrollment data from the California Department of Education's College-Going Rate files, which tracks where every public school graduate actually enrolls.

UC Systemwide Admit Rates (Fall 2024)

Before looking at individual schools, here's the system-wide context from the UC Accountability data tables:

UC CampusAdmit Rate (Fall 2024)Selectivity Tier
UCLA9.0%πŸ”΄ Extremely selective
UC Berkeley11.0%πŸ”΄ Extremely selective
UC San Diego26.8%🟑 Selective
UC Irvine28.8%🟑 Selective
UC Santa Barbara32.9%🟑 Selective
UC Davis42.1%🟒 Moderate
UC Santa Cruz65.0%🟒 Open
UC Riverside77.2%🟒 Open
UC Merced99.6%βšͺ Near-open

Source: UC Accountability Report 2025, Chapter 1 data tables. California resident admit rate: 70.1% overall.

Real UC Enrollment Data: Public Schools (CDE, 2022-23)

This is not self-reported. This is the California Department of Education tracking actual enrollment at UC campuses within 16 months of graduation. Source: CDE College-Going Rate files.

SchoolGrads→ UCUC Rate→ CSU→ CCC→ Private→ OOS 4yrCollege Rate
Carlmont High58010918.8%831583512888.6%
Palo Alto High5428816.2%32764823388.2%
Gunn High4766714.1%30724222291.2%
Sequoia High4275412.6%67153235883.1%
Menlo-Atherton4826012.4%461332613082.2%
Woodside High402379.2%43162197483.6%

Source: CDE College-Going Rate, 16-month post-completion, AY 2022-23. "CCC" = California Community Colleges. "OOS 4yr" = Out-of-state four-year colleges. CDE only tracks public schools; private schools are not included in this dataset.

UC Enrollment Trends (2014-2023, CDE Data)

Nine years of real data shows which schools consistently send students to UC:

School9yr Avg UC RateBest YearWorst YearTrend
Carlmont19.0%22.7% (2017-18)13.3% (2014-15)πŸ“ˆ Steady strong
Gunn16.1%19.5% (2021-22)13.6% (2014-15)πŸ“Š Volatile, OOS-heavy
Palo Alto High13.7%16.4% (2020-21)9.4% (2014-15)πŸ“ˆ Improving
M-A High10.0%12.4% (2022-23)7.8% (2014-15)πŸ“ˆ Improving
Sequoia9.5%12.6% (2022-23)7.0% (2020-21)πŸ“Š Volatile
Woodside9.0%10.5% (2015-16)7.2% (2016-17)➑️ Flat

Key insight: Palo Alto High and Gunn have low UC rates (14-16%) not because students don't get in, but because 43-47% of graduates go to out-of-state four-year colleges. Their families choose private/OOS over UC. At M-A, 27% go to community college first. Very different populations making very different choices with very different resources.

Private School Comparison (Self-Reported)

Private schools don't appear in CDE data. We're stuck with what they choose to publish:

SchoolClass SizeUC Matriculants (3yr)UC RateTop PlacementsData Quality
Menlo School~143/yr49 (over 3 years)11.4%Berkeley (20), UCLA (8), UCSB (4), Santa Cruz (5), Merced (5)🟒 Exact counts per university
Castilleja~51/yrUnknownUnknownAdmitted to all 9 UC campuses (2025)🟑 Lists campuses, no counts
Sacred Heart Prep~115/yrUnknownUnknownNot publishedπŸ”΄ None published
Crystal Springs~80/yrUnknownUnknown"100% to 4-year colleges"πŸ”΄ Vague
Harker~200/yrUnknownUnknownAnecdotal🟑 Some FindingSchool data
Pinewood~60/yrUnknownUnknownNot publishedπŸ”΄ None published

The uncomfortable comparison: Free public Carlmont High sends 18.8% of graduates to UC. Menlo School ($65K/yr) sends 11.4%. Menlo's students go to Stanford and Ivy League instead β€” but if UC enrollment is your metric, the public school wins outright.

Menlo School Deep Dive (Classes of 2023-2025)

Menlo is the only local school that publishes detailed-enough data for real analysis. From their 2025-26 School Profile PDF:

Castilleja: What We Know (Class of 2025)

From the Castilleja School Profile 2025-26:

Additional Data Sources

For even deeper analysis:

☠️ Commute Risk: Accumulated Micromorts

A micromort is a 1-in-a-million chance of death. It's how risk analysts compare activities that seem incomparable β€” one skydive (7 Β΅Mort), one scuba dive (5 Β΅Mort), one day of skiing (0.7 Β΅Mort). The concept was developed by Ronald A. Howard at Stanford β€” fitting, given where these schools are.

Nobody includes commute mortality risk in school evaluations. They should. The numbers below use county-specific fatality rates from SWITRS/FARS data rather than the national average, because the routes matter. The Menlo Park β†’ San Jose commute (US-101 through Santa Clara County) is one of the deadliest stretches of highway in the United States (3rd overall, 78 fatalities 2015-2019). The Menlo Park β†’ Hillsborough route (I-280 through San Mateo County) is significantly safer.

County-Specific Fatality Rates

Using California SWITRS data and Caltrans DVMT (Daily Vehicle Miles Traveled) estimates:

County / CorridorAnnual FatalitiesAnnual VMT (billions)Rate (deaths/100M VMT)Β΅Mort per Mile
California statewide4,061~3221.260.0126
San Mateo County~35~7.50.470.0047
Santa Clara County~95~17.00.560.0056
US-101 (Santa Clara segment)~16β€”~1.4 (est.)0.014

Sources: California OTS Quick Stats 2023 (statewide MDR). County fatalities from SWITRS. County DVMT from Caltrans MVMT estimates. US-101 Santa Clara fatalities from ValuePenguin/FARS analysis (78 deaths over 5 years). vehicle-safety.org maintains a complete FARS dataset for per-model analysis.

Key insight: San Mateo and Santa Clara counties are 2-3Γ— safer per mile than the national average β€” suburban infrastructure, higher incomes (newer cars, more safety features), less impairment. But US-101 specifically is above the national average rate. The corridor your child commutes on matters more than the county average.

The Corridor Problem: 101 vs 280 vs Local Roads

Not all miles are equal. The route to each school determines which fatality rate applies:

Counter-intuitive: Highway miles are more dangerous per mile but safer per hour than arterial roads (you cover more distance in less exposure time). A 22-mile freeway commute on I-280 may be comparable in risk to a 10-mile stop-and-go arterial commute β€” but takes less time.

Micromort Accumulation by School

Uses corridor-specific rates (not national average). Round-trip driving distances from central Menlo Park. 180 school days/year. Years = typical full enrollment span. "Normalized 7yr" column shows what every school would accumulate if attended for exactly 7 years, enabling apples-to-apples comparison regardless of actual enrollment length. 🚬 Cigarettes column converts micromorts to equivalent cigarettes smoked (1 cigarette β‰ˆ 1.4 micromorts, per Shaw 1987) β€” a unit of risk most people viscerally understand.

SchoolRT MiCorridorYrsΒ΅Mort/yrTotal Β΅MortNormalized 7yrβ‰ˆ Skydives (7yr)🚬 Cigarettes (7yr)Risk
Encinal Elementary1.5Local31.34916● Negligible
Oak Knoll Elementary2Local31.751229● Negligible
Phillips Brooks2Local31.751229● Negligible
Menlo School2Local71.7121229● Negligible
Sacred Heart Prep2Local71.7121229● Negligible
Nativity School2Local61.7101229● Negligible
Hillview Middle3Local32.5818313● Low
La Entrada3Local52.51318313● Low
M-A High School3Local42.51018313● Low
Castilleja4El Camino73.42424317● Low
Keys School6Local65.13036526● Low
INTL / PBS12El Camino/101613.682951468● Moderate
Pinewood142801011.8118831259● Moderate
Woodland School16280613.481941367● Moderate
Notre Dame Belmont20El Camino/Ralston419.3771351996● Moderate
Crystal Springs22280718.51301301993● Moderate
Nueva242801020.220214120101● Elevated
GISSV30101675.645452976378● High
Harker4410110110.91,109776111554● Highest

Normalized Comparison: The Full Pipeline vs Just a Few Years

The raw "Total Β΅Mort" column is misleading when comparing schools with different enrollment spans. A school you attend for 10 years will naturally accumulate more risk than one you attend for 3 years, regardless of commute distance. The Normalized 7yr column levels the playing field:

What This Means in Human Terms

Time Cost Compounds the Risk

The micromort calculation only captures mortality risk. It doesn't capture the time cost, which compounds the health impact:

Those 110 days at Harker could be spent on sleep, homework, extracurriculars, family time, or literally anything else. This is a real cost that never appears on a school's brochure.

Caveats & Methodology

Limitations & What's Missing

Data We Couldn't Get

What These Absences Tell You

A school that doesn't publish outcome data is making a choice. Menlo School publishes a 3-year college matriculation list with specific counts per university. Crystal Springs says "100% go to 4-year colleges." These are not equivalent levels of transparency, and the gap is informative. Schools with strong outcomes have every incentive to publish them.

Methodology

Data Sources

Rigor Standards Applied

Analysis compiled March 30, 2026. Data should be verified directly with each school before making enrollment decisions.

πŸ”§ Build This for Your City

Want this analysis for where you live? We wrote a ready-to-use prompt that generates the full report β€” comparison tables, S&P 500 opportunity cost, micromorts, UC admissions, everything β€” customized for your area. Grab the prompt β†’