Motley
District 1717
PublicDistrict 17Zoned

Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School

443 ST MARKS AVENUE

At a Glance

A zoned neighborhood school with sky-high family trust and zero suspensions — still catching up academically but showing real momentum

Best suited for

Families who prioritize a warm, trusting school community with strong teacher relationships and want to support a school with upward academic momentum. Parents comfortable with the Crown Heights neighborhood and its tradeoffs — good transit and family density, but some safety considerations — will find a school where their children will be known and supported. Families expecting top-tier test scores may want to explore options with stronger proficiency metrics, but those who value culture over metrics will find a lot to like here.

What stands out
  • Zero suspensions for three consecutive years — exceptional discipline record
  • 100% of families report strong teacher relationships and high instruction quality
  • Nearly tripled ELA proficiency since 2016 (17% to 55%)
  • Fifth-grade ELA scores at 62% — older students performing well above younger grades
  • Parent trust metrics in the mid-to-high 90s across the board
Things to consider
  • Chronic absenteeism at 65% is significantly elevated — nearly 1 in 3 students are chronically absent
  • Academic performance still trails district averages in both ELA and math
  • Neighborhood safety indicators are relatively low — families should evaluate personally
  • PTA fundraising slightly below district average, suggesting limited extra enrichment resources
  • Small enrollment (301) means fewer extracurricular options than larger schools

Based on 2024-2025 data

School SummaryDistrict 17

Among District 17 elementary schools, Brooklyn Arts and Science sits below peer zoned schools like P.S. 249 (89/100) and P.S. 316 (77/100) on state ratings. However, the peer comparison only shows charter schools and a few high-performers at the top — this zoned school serves a broader population including many higher-need families. The dramatic test score improvement and exceptional culture/climate metrics suggest this is a school on the rise, not a underperformer.

AcademicsImproving

Test scores here have climbed steadily — ELA jumped from 17% in 2016 to nearly 55% in 2025, and math more than doubled to 46%. That's real progress, the kind that suggests effective instruction rather than a statistical fluke. That said, both subjects still sit below the district averages (60.5% ELA, 57.3% math), meaning students are performing below their peers across District 17. The grade-level breakdown is encouraging: fifth-graders hit 62% ELA, showing older students are getting stronger preparation. Class sizes are right at the district average at 22 students, so there's no size advantage explaining the gains.

Culturestrong

The survey numbers here are striking: 100% of families report strong relationships with teachers, 100% say teachers deliver high-quality instruction, and teacher trust in leadership sits at 93-100%. This is a school where people genuinely like working and families feel heard. The attendance picture is more complicated — overall attendance at 90.7% is basically district average, but chronic absenteeism at 65% is notably high, with male students missing more than females (69% vs 60.4%). Discipline is a bright spot: zero suspensions for three consecutive years, a rare record in any public school. The daily feel here seems to be one of warmth and connection, though the chronic absenteeism rate suggests some families are still struggling to get kids to school regularly.

Community

With 301 students, this is a small school — the kind where teachers know every face. The demographics are diverse: 42% Black, 30% Hispanic, 20% White, and 4% each Asian and Multi-Racial. The diversity index of 73% reflects this mix. Nearly 60% of students qualify for free or reduced lunch (economic need index 58.9), and 19% have IEPs, indicating a population with real support needs. PTA fundraising of $115 per student is slightly below the district average of $44 per student, suggesting modest but present family involvement.

NeighborhoodCrown Heights (North)

Crown Heights is a densely populated, transit-rich neighborhood in central Brooklyn — the education orientation score of 77 and family density of 90 reflect a community where families with children are concentrated. The median home value over $1 million tells you this isn't a low-income neighborhood, though 20% poverty and a median household income of $73,859 show economic diversity. Transit access is excellent (87th percentile). The safety numbers are the weak link: the low safety percentile and high crime density (4,095 per 100k) suggest this is an area where parents should be aware of their surroundings, particularly during certain times. There are parks and community resources typical of a family-heavy neighborhood.

The neighborhood's high transit score (87th percentile) means most families likely walk or take public transit — car-dependent commuting is uncommon here.

Academic Performance

ELA Proficiency

54.9%

Students scoring proficient or above on the NY State ELA exam.

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Math Proficiency

46%

Students scoring proficient or above on the NY State Math exam.

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Survey Results

Family Feedback
Satisfaction
94%
Teacher Trust
97%
Principal Trust
96%
Relationships
100%
Teacher Perspective
Instruction
100%
Principal Trust
93%
Collegial Trust
100%

NYC School Survey (2025) · 70 families responded (28% rate)

Racial & Ethnic Diversity

Diverse
30%Hispanic/Latino
42%Black
20%White
4%Asian
4%Multi-Racial

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

PTA Fundraising

2024-25
$34,722total raised
$115per student

Source: DOE Local Law 171 disclosure

Economic Need & Special Populations

Economic Need Index
58.9%
IEP Students
18.9%

Discipline

0suspensions (0% of students)
3-Year Trend— Stable
21
22
23

NYSED Student & Educator Database (2023-24)

Frequently Asked Questions
Is Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School a good school?
On Motley, Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School earns an overall quality score of 51/100 — a blend of New York State ELA and math results, attendance, and the school-climate survey. Its state test results run below the District 17 average.
What grades does Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School serve?
Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School serves grades Pre-K to 5.
How do students get into Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School?
Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School admits by zone — families living in its attendance zone are generally guaranteed a seat.
Is Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School public, charter, or private?
Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School is a public school in NYC Community School District 17.
What neighborhood is Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School in?
Brooklyn Arts and Science Elementary School is in Crown Heights (North), Brooklyn.
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