Motley
District 2929
PublicDistrict 29Zoned

Cynthia Jenkins School

179-37 137 Avenue

At a Glance

A small zoned school in a stable, homeowner-heavy Queens neighborhood where test scores have nearly doubled in three years but chronic absenteeism remains a significant challenge

Best suited for

Families who prioritize a small, relationship-driven school with strong parent-teacher bonds and are willing to actively manage attendance challenges. Parents who value the zero-tolerance discipline approach and want a school where their child won't be suspended for minor issues. Families who live in the zoned area or nearby and have transportation, since the location isn't transit-friendly. This school is particularly well-suited for families who want to be highly involved in their child's education and who believe that strong home-school relationships drive outcomes.

What stands out
  • Remarkable academic turnaround — ELA proficiency more than doubled from 2022 to 2025
  • Zero suspensions for three consecutive years — an unusually strong discipline record
  • Near-universal parent trust (97% parent-teacher trust, 98% parent-principal trust)
  • 100% of parents report 'strong relationships' with the school
  • Very small school (279 students) means potential for individualized attention
Things to consider
  • Chronic absenteeism is very high at 58.5% — nearly 6 in 10 students miss a significant amount of school
  • Test scores, while improving, still trail the district average slightly
  • Math performance, especially in 5th grade (28.6%), shows a notable gap compared to other grades
  • Limited transit access makes the school harder to reach without a car
  • The school is nearly all-Black (88%), which may matter to families seeking more diverse environments

Based on 2024-2025 data

School SummaryDistrict 29

Among District 29 peer schools, Cynthia Jenkins ranks below nearby options like P.S. 176 Cambria Heights (81/100), P.S. 360 (76/100), and significantly below the two Success Academy charters (95 and 91/100). However, those schools use different admissions methods (charters via lottery, P.S. 176 via screened admissions). As a zoned school serving its neighborhood, Cynthia Jenkins competes primarily with other zoned options in the area. The academic trajectory is promising enough that it may close the gap with mid-tier peers within a few years, especially given the culture and family engagement strengths.

AcademicsImproving

Test scores at Cynthia Jenkins have nearly doubled over three years — ELA climbed from 22.6% to 54.6% and Math from 16.9% to 46.8% between 2022 and 2025. That's a dramatic improvement, though both subjects still fall slightly below the District 29 averages (56.9% ELA, 53.7% Math). The school rates 2.03 out of 4 overall, compared to the district average of 2.21. Looking at grade-level performance, third graders are performing strongest with 61.9% ELA and 68.1% Math proficiency, while fifth grade math drops to 28.6% — a notable gap suggesting math instruction may need strengthening in the upper grades.

Culturestrong

This is a school where families feel heard and teachers feel supported. Parent satisfaction hits 94%, with nearly universal trust in both teachers (97%) and the principal (98%). Every single parent surveyed reported 'strong relationships' with the school — an extraordinary finding. Teachers rate instruction quality at 94% and report 98% safety. The trade-off: chronic absenteeism sits at 58.5% (notably higher than the district average), which may be dragging down overall performance even as scores climb. Notably, there have been zero suspensions for three consecutive years — a rare achievement that speaks to a restorative or relationship-based approach to discipline.

Community

Cynthia Jenkins serves 279 students in a PK-5 zoned school with a demographics profile that mirrors its surrounding neighborhood: 88% Black, 8% Hispanic, 2% Asian, and 1% Native American. The economic need index is high at 73.5%, meaning nearly three-quarters of students come from low-income households. About 19% of students have IEPs. The student body is notably homogeneous compared to the diversity index of 26%, reflecting St. Albans' own demographic character as a predominantly Black, working-to-middle-class community with high homeownership (74.7%).

NeighborhoodSt. Albans

St. Albans is a settled, residential Queens neighborhood known for its tree-lined blocks, high homeownership rate (74.7%), and relative economic stability (median household income of $97,911, poverty rate just 9.2%). It's not a transit-rich area — the transit score of 38.7 reflects limited subway access, meaning most families will drive or bus. The neighborhood scores highly on stability (97.32) and health environment (84.67), with a moderate safety score (65.13). Families describe it as a place where people put down roots; the 74.7% homeownership rate confirms that. There are parks and family-oriented blocks, though it's more suburban in feel than Manhattan or inner Queens.

This is a car-dependent area. Families without vehicles should factor in bus routes and travel time, as the neighborhood lacks easy subway access. The school sits in a residential area where walking is pleasant but distances to transit hubs can be significant.

Academic Performance

ELA Proficiency

54.6%

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

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Math Proficiency

46.8%

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
98%
Relationships
100%
Teacher Perspective
Instruction
94%
Principal Trust
81%
Collegial Trust
87%
Safety
98%

NYC School Survey (2025) · 115 families responded (42% rate)

Racial & Ethnic Diversity

Low
8%Hispanic/Latino
88%Black
2%Asian
1%Native American

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Economic Need & Special Populations

Economic Need Index
73.5%
IEP Students
18.6%

Discipline

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

NYSED Student & Educator Database (2023-24)

Frequently Asked Questions
Is Cynthia Jenkins School a good school?
On Motley, Cynthia Jenkins 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 in line with the District 29 average.
What grades does Cynthia Jenkins School serve?
Cynthia Jenkins School serves grades Pre-K to 5.
How do students get into Cynthia Jenkins School?
Cynthia Jenkins School admits by zone — families living in its attendance zone are generally guaranteed a seat.
Is Cynthia Jenkins School public, charter, or private?
Cynthia Jenkins School is a public school in NYC Community School District 29.
What neighborhood is Cynthia Jenkins School in?
Cynthia Jenkins School is in St. Albans, Queens.
Premium Details

Get the complete picture

Motley pulls together data from across New York City so you don’t have to. One free account, every school.

Data from 15+ NYC agencies on every school
Personalized school matching for your family
Save schools and build your research board
Sign In — It’s Free

No credit card required

Get all this when you sign in

Survey data, program listings, admissions stats, and the full editorial profile — free, no credit card.

Full School Profile

Skip the tour guessing game. Get the standout features, honest trade-offs, and whether your kid will actually thrive here — before you visit.

Survey Results

See what 2,600+ schools’ own families and teachers really think — trust, safety, instruction quality — so you walk in with the truth, not the brochure.

Programs & Activities

Stop Googling program lists. AP courses, STEM labs, dual-language tracks, sports teams, arts — all categorized so you can compare schools in minutes.

Admissions Demand

Know your odds before you apply. Apps-per-seat ratios, offer rates, and fill data — so you don’t waste your top choice on a long shot.

Economic Need & Special Populations

Find out if the support your child needs is actually there — IEP enrollment, economic need index, and the demographics no other site surfaces.

Discipline

One bad year doesn’t tell you much. Three years of state-verified suspension data shows whether things are getting better or worse.

Sign In — It’s Free