Common Ground High School 2024-11-17T08:10:35-05:00
For Current Students & Families
For Prospective Students & Families

Are YOU looking for a school where you can … Blaze your own path? Graduate ready for college and careers, leadership and life? Be yourself? Change the world? To learn more, visit our Become a Student page.

You can also use the links below to learn more about our school …

Contact Us

Please reach out – we are here to help!
Main Number: 203.389.4333
Complete Teachers & Staff List

Main Office

Health Office

Click here for Student Health documents and information.

Click here for our School Wellness Policy Triennial Assessment Summary of Findings

Health Office
Our Results

Over the last ten years, more than 90% of Common Ground graduates have gained admissions to college. More than 90% of our students take college or career-ready courses while still in high school. In 2023-24, our students made big gains on the SAT. Common Ground was the state’s first U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon School and a recipient of many awards and grants in recognition of our work, including the National Building Hope Award in 2022.

Our Approach to Learning

Common Ground’s curriculum combines rigorous high academic standards for all, responsive relationships with adults and peers who really care, relevant, real-world learning that’s rooted in the community and environment, and real roles and rights for students. Imagine studying …

  1. Math while you … decide what should be planted on Common Ground’s farm to maximize production, nutrition, taste, and cultural relevance.
  2. Science while you … turn what you are learning about climate change into beautiful paintings, spoken word, and graffiti art
  3. English while you … work with professional actors to write and perform plays about social justice issues that matter to you.
Learn More »
Recent Blog Posts about the High School

Meet Victor Rios, Student Support Manager!

Victor Rios is the Student Support Manager at Common Ground.  He has guided students through high school academically, and emotionally, for years.  Educational Change intern Amelia Bragg-Phillips interviewed Mr. Rios to get an idea of