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Elementary Schools in Pleasanton, California: Pleasanton schools aren't just reaching proficiency — they're pushing students beyond it.

Above Average2024–25 data9 schools · avg 71.9/100

Pleasanton, California has 9 ranked elementary schools with an average Scope Score of 71.9/100 — 28.1 points above the state average of 43.8. The highest-scoring school is Henry P. Mohr Elementary at 84/100, where 63.2% of students exceed the state standard on the 2025 CAASPP assessment. Pleasanton schools average 50.3% exceeded standard (state: 21.6%) — this exceeded-vs-met distinction reveals whether schools push students beyond proficiency or pace toward it. Of 9 schools, 5 High Ceiling stand out for their performance profiles. Chronic absenteeism averages 9.4% (below the state average of 18.1%). Data source: California Department of Education CAASPP 2025, analyzed by SchoolScope.

Avg Scope Score
71.9
State avg: 43.8
SchoolScope composite
Score Range
29.0
55.4 – 84.4
Avg Exceeded %
50.3%
State avg: 21.6%
Chronic Absenteeism
9.4%
State avg: 18.1%
Schools Ranked
9
With Scope Scores
LevelSchoolsAvg ScoreExceededvs State
Elementary9Strong
71.9/100
50.3%+28.1
High4Solid
57.5/100
34.0%+10.1
Middle4Strong
80.4/100
53.8%+39.9

How Pleasanton schools compare

Pleasanton has 9 ranked elementary schools with an average Scope Score of 71.9/100 — 28.1 points above the state average of 43.8 (CDE CAASPP 2025).

The top-ranked school is Henry P. Mohr Elementary with a Scope Score of 84 and 63.2% of students exceeding standard.

These schools are pushing students past the bar, not just to it. Pleasanton schools average 50.3% exceeding standard — well above the statewide average of 21.6%.

Chronic absenteeism in Pleasanton averages 9.4% — below the state average of 18.1%.

How we score · Exceeded 40% · Met+Exceeded 22% · Growth 15% · Absenteeism 10% · Suspension 5% · ELPAC 5% · Baseline 3%

School archetypes in Pleasanton

5 High Ceiling3 Strong All-Around1 Culture First

Archetypes are data-driven labels based on Scope Score dimensions. Learn more

For the data nerds

Every school in Pleasanton

ranked by Scope Score · 2024–25 CAASPP

#SchoolExceededScore
1Harvest Park Middle
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
57.5%Strong
86/100
2Henry P. Mohr Elementary
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
63.2%Strong
84/100
3Walnut Grove Elementary
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
61.4%Strong
83/100
4Amador Valley High
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
53.3%Strong
82/100
5Thomas S. Hart Middle
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
55.2%Strong
81/100
6Foothill High
Pleasanton Unified Strong All-Around
46.5%Strong
79/100
7Lydiksen Elementary
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
59.1%Strong
78/100
8Vintage Hills Elementary
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
50.1%Strong
76/100
9Donlon Elementary
Pleasanton Unified High Ceiling
52.5%Strong
72/100
10Fairlands Elementary
Pleasanton Unified Strong All-Around
49.7%Strong
72/100
11Phoebe Apperson Hearst Elementary
Pleasanton Unified Strong All-Around
41.1%Solid
63/100
12Alisal Elementary
Pleasanton Unified Strong All-Around
42.7%Solid
63/100
13Pleasanton Middle
Pleasanton Unified Strong All-Around
38.7%Solid
61/100
14Valley View Elementary
Pleasanton Unified Culture First
32.8%Solid
55/100
15Village High
Pleasanton Unified Building Momentum
0.0%Needs Support
7/100
Source: CDE CAASPP 2025 · 15 schoolsMethodology · Explore all schools

Data source: California Department of Education · CAASPP 2024-25 · Methodology

Scores are SchoolScope's analysis of public data, not official CDE ratings. They represent one way of interpreting test results and should not be the sole basis for school decisions.

Private Schools in Pleasanton

Private schools don't participate in California's standardized testing (CAASPP) and cannot be scored or ranked. Showing enrollment, student-teacher ratio, and affiliation where available.

What Scope Scores can't tell you about Pleasanton

Numbers tell you whether students are clearing the bar. A school visit tells you whether they're happy doing it. These metrics are intentionally missing from the Scope Score: class sizes and student-teacher interaction quality; arts, music, athletics, and enrichment programs; teacher experience and turnover; campus safety and social-emotional support; parent and community engagement; quality of special education and gifted programs; how school zones and enrollment boundaries affect access. Full methodology

Frequently asked questions

Are the schools in Pleasanton good?
Pleasanton's 9 ranked elementary schools average a Scope Score of 71.9/100, which is 28.1 points above the state average. 50.3% of students exceed the state standard on average (state average: 21.6%). The Scope Score weights seven dimensions: exceeded standard (40%), met standard (22%), grade-level growth (15%), chronic absenteeism (10%), ELPAC proficiency (5%), suspension rate (5%), and baseline proficiency (3%). Data source: California Department of Education CAASPP 2025, analyzed by SchoolScope.
What is the best elementary school in Pleasanton?
The highest-scoring elementary school in Pleasanton is Henry P. Mohr Elementary with a Scope Score of 84/100 and 63.2% of students exceeding the state standard. Rankings are based on SchoolScope's 2025 Scope Score, which measures academic performance and school climate using publicly available California data. See full methodology.
How do Pleasanton schools compare to the state average?
Pleasanton elementary schools average a Scope Score of 71.9/100 — 28.1 points above the state average of 43.8. The exceeded rate averages 50.3% vs. 21.6% statewide. Chronic absenteeism averages 9.4% vs. 18.1% statewide.
How many schools are in Pleasanton?
Pleasanton has 9 ranked elementary schools with Scope Scores. Schools are ranked using a weighted composite of CAASPP test performance, growth trajectory, chronic absenteeism, and suspension rate. Schools with insufficient testing data are not ranked.
What does the Scope Score measure?
The Scope Score is SchoolScope's proprietary composite rating (0–100) based on seven dimensions of publicly available California school data: the exceeded-vs-met standard split, overall proficiency, grade 3–5 growth, chronic absenteeism, suspension rate, ELPAC English Learner proficiency, and baseline proficiency. Unlike single-number ratings, the Scope Score separates students who "exceeded" from those who "met" the standard — revealing whether a school pushes students beyond proficiency or paces toward it. Full methodology and weights.