Elementary schools • Enrollment numbers are for 2022–23 school year. • Springville and Raleigh Hills were previously K–8 schools, with a choice for students in grades 6–8 to remain but were transitioned to K–5 in the 2023–24 school year. Aloha–Huber Park remains a K-8 for dual language immersion students.
Middle schools The Beaverton School District operates nine middle schools housing 6th, 7th, and 8th grades. Prior to the 1994–95 school year they housed students in grades 7–9, as a part of the district's 6-3-3 plan established in the 1960s. • Enrollment numbers are for 2022–2023 school year.
High schools High schools in Beaverton are part of the
6A-2 Metro League for interscholastic athletics and activities. The newest,
Mountainside High School, opened in September 2017 for freshmen and sophomores. As a result, the district began planning to alter its high school boundaries. The boundary changes were approved in June 2017 and went into effect at the beginning of the 2017–18 school year. • Enrollment numbers are for 2022–23 school year.
Option schools ====
Arts & Communication Magnet Academy (ACMA) ==== • Focuses on the arts for 6th through 12th grade students. Principal: Bjorn Paige. ====
Beaverton Academy of Science and Engineering (BASE) ==== • A merger of the former schools
Beaverton Health & Science School and
School of Science and Technology. Principal: Diane Fitzpatrick. ====
International School of Beaverton (ISB) ==== • Offers the
International Baccalaureate program for 6th through 12th grade students. Principal: Andrew Gillford. ====
Merlo Station High School (MSHS) ==== • Houses Community School and Merlo Station Night School. Principal: Rachel Sip.
Rachel Carson Environmental Middle School (RCEMS) • Located at Cedar Park Middle School, it focuses on
environmental science for 6th through 8th grade students. Principal: Shirley Brock.
Summa • Programs at Meadow Park, Stoller, Tumwater, and Whitford middle schools for talented and gifted students. 681 students were enrolled in Summa classes at five middle schools for the 2022–23 school year. In November 2014 a plan to move Summa students who attend Stoller Middle School to the newly constructed Tumwater middle school as a solution to overcrowding was proposed, but was delayed in November 2015 due to opposition from parents and school administration.
Closed schools Cedar Hills Elementary School • Built in the early 1950s; closed in 1983. The building was repurposed as the Cedar Hills Recreation Center of the
Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District (THPRD), initially leased from BSD, but sold to THPRD circa late 1986.
Garden Home Elementary School • Closed in 1982 and leased to THPRD, who put it to use as the Garden Home Community Center starting later the same year. The building was later sold to THPRD.
Sunset Valley Elementary School • Opened in 1948, and closed in 1980. The building and property were purchased in 1979 by
Electro Scientific Industries, which used it until the mid-1990s. That building was since razed and replaced by a
Home Depot. ==Administration==