At a Glance
A small zoned elementary school with strong family trust and zero suspensions, working to stabilize academics after years of volatility
Families who live within the zone and prioritize a small-school feel with exceptional parent-teacher relationships over top test scores. Parents who value the zero-suspension approach and strong trust between families and staff may find this school a good fit, but they should be prepared to actively monitor academic progress — particularly in the upper grades where proficiency drops off significantly. Families who can support homework and attendance consistently will be better positioned to help their children succeed given the chronic absenteeism challenge.
- Zero suspensions for three years running — a discipline approach that keeps kids in class
- Near-universal parent trust (99%) and principal trust (98%) — families feel heard and valued
- Teacher instruction quality rated 95%, well above the district average of 86%
- Small class sizes (average 17.9 students) with total enrollment of 288
- Pre-K and special education (SE) programs integrated into a zoned K-5 school
- Test scores are below district average and have been volatile — the recent jump to 46.4% ELA is encouraging but follows years of fluctuation
- 5th grade proficiency drops dramatically (31.6% ELA, 11.8% math) compared to 3rd grade — a significant red flag for sustained academic growth
- Chronic absenteeism at 46.6% means nearly half of students are missing enough school to fall behind
- Teacher-reported safety (87%) is notably below the district average (94.2%) and below parent perceptions
- Black students have higher chronic absenteeism rates (51.7%) than Hispanic students (36.6%) — equity concerns in attendance interventions
- The school scored 1.63/4 overall, well below the district average of 2.29
Based on 2024-2025 data
School SummaryDistrict 16
Compared to peer schools in District 16, Brighter Choice trails significantly. Success Academy Charter School - Bed Stuy 3 scores 95/100, Brooklyn Brownstone School at 84/100, Bedford Stuyvesant New Beginnings Charter School at 83/100, P.S. 040 George W. Carver at 83/100, P.S. 262 El Hajj Malik El Shabazz at 81/100, and P.S. 005 Dr. Ronald McNair at 79/100. While Brighter Choice doesn't have a comparable quality score listed, its 1.63/4 overall rating and proficiency scores well below district averages place it near the bottom of district performance. The standout exception is in culture and climate metrics — where parent trust and teacher quality ratings exceed nearly all peers.
ELA proficiency at 46.4% and math at 35.3% place this school well below the district averages of 57.6% and 57% respectively — meaning students are performing noticeably behind their peers in District 16. The historical data is bumpy: scores peaked in 2018 (46.8% ELA, 47.7% math), then fell sharply, with math hitting a low of 12.7% in 2022 before recovering to current levels. The most striking pattern is the 5th grade drop-off: while 3rd graders show 54.5% ELA proficiency, that number plummets to 31.6% by 5th grade, and math drops from 47.8% to just 11.8%. This is a significant concern — something happens between grades 3 and 5 that students aren't mastering the material at the same rate.
The survey data tells a complicated story. Teacher instruction quality scores are exceptional at 95% (well above the district average of 86%), and family trust in teachers and the principal is nearly universal — 99% parent-teacher trust, 98% parent-principal trust. Parent satisfaction sits at 92%, slightly above the district average. However, teacher-reported safety is 87%, which is below the district average of 94.2%, suggesting teachers may have concerns about the school environment that families don't share. The school has maintained zero suspensions for three consecutive years, which is notable in a district where the average suspension rate is 1%. Attendance, though, is a real challenge: the 85.8% attendance rate is below district average, and chronic absenteeism at 46.6% means nearly half of students are missing significant school time — particularly concerning for Black students (51.7% chronic absenteeism).
With 288 students, this is a small school — the kind where teachers know every face. The student body is 48% Black, 35% Hispanic, 10% White, 4% multi-racial, 2% Asian, and 1% Native American, giving it a diversity index of 67%. The economic need index is 69.4%, meaning most families here face significant financial challenges. About 17% of students have IEPs, indicating a substantial special education population. This is a community school serving families who live nearby — not a selective or choice school drawing from across the borough.
Bedford-Stuyvesant is a transit-rich neighborhood with an education orientation score of 69.35 and family density at 87.36 — meaning lots of kids in the area. The median household income is $70,755 with a 23% poverty rate, and homeownership is low at 26.7%. However, the safety score of 22.61 is low, and the crime density figure of 3,817.5 is high — these are real factors for families considering the daily walk to school. The neighborhood has strong transit access (94.64), making it manageable for commuters, but the health environment scores are also low (22.99), with elevated asthma rates and lead exposure concerns.
This is a zoned school serving families who live nearby, so most students walk. The high transit score means families without cars can manage, but parents with younger children may factor safety perceptions into their daily routines.
Academic Performance
ELA Proficiency
Students scoring proficient or above on the NY State ELA exam.
NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23
Math Proficiency
Students scoring proficient or above on the NY State Math exam.
NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23
Survey Results
NYC School Survey (2025) · 98 families responded (54% rate)
Racial & Ethnic Diversity
NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23
Economic Need & Special Populations
Discipline
NYSED Student & Educator Database (2023-24)
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Brighter Choice Community School a good school?
- On Motley, Brighter Choice Community School earns an overall quality score of 41/100 — a blend of New York State ELA and math results, attendance, and the school-climate survey. Its state test results run below the District 16 average.
- What grades does Brighter Choice Community School serve?
- Brighter Choice Community School serves grades Pre-K to 5.
- How do students get into Brighter Choice Community School?
- Brighter Choice Community School admits by zone — families living in its attendance zone are generally guaranteed a seat.
- Is Brighter Choice Community School public, charter, or private?
- Brighter Choice Community School is a public school in NYC Community School District 16.
- What neighborhood is Brighter Choice Community School in?
- Brighter Choice Community School is in Bedford-Stuyvesant (East), Brooklyn.
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