At a Glance
A improving neighborhood zoned school where strong family relationships and zero suspensions define the culture, even as academics climb back from pandemic lows
Families who prioritize a small, trusting school community with strong parent-teacher relationships and are patient with academic improvement timelines. Parents willing to actively engage with school life will find a responsive partner. Those seeking higher test score performance may want to explore district-wide options, including charter schools.
- Zero suspensions for two consecutive years — an exceptional discipline record
- Near-universal family trust: 99% parent-teacher trust and 100% report strong relationships
- Third-grade performance (52.6% ELA, 68.4% math) significantly outpaces older grades
- Small class sizes (average 21.6) allow for personalized attention
- 90% family survey response rate suggests highly engaged parent community
- Test scores remain well below district averages — students are catching up, not leading
- Chronic absenteeism is high at 54.8%, affecting overall performance
- Fourth and fifth graders show weaker outcomes than third graders
- IEP population is high at 29% — ensure the school provides adequate support services
- The school scored 1.62/4 overall, placing it in the lower tier of District 14 schools
Based on 2024-2025 data
School SummaryDistrict 14
Among District 14's peer schools — which include highly-rated charter schools like Success Academy (97/100) and competitive zoned schools like P.S. 031 (91/100) — P.S. 023 ranks lower in academic performance. However, its survey metrics and discipline record rival or exceed peer schools, suggesting it excels in areas that don't show up on test scores. Families should view this as a school with strong relational foundations but room to grow academically.
Test scores at P.S. 023 have climbed significantly from their pandemic trough — ELA rose from 15.2% in 2022 to 37.8% in 2025, and math jumped from 16.2% to 43.2% over the same period. However, both subjects still fall well below the district averages of 62.4% ELA and 59.5% math, placing this school in the lower tier of District 14. There's a notable gap between grade levels: third graders perform strongly (52.6% ELA, 68.4% math), while fourth and fifth grades lag considerably. The overall 1.62/4 score reflects a school still in recovery mode.
The survey data here tells a striking story — parents and teachers report exceptionally high trust (99% parent-teacher trust, 94% teacher-principal trust) and nearly universal agreement on strong relationships (100%). Teachers rate instruction quality at 98% and report 94% safety, both strong marks. The attendance picture is more complicated: while the 88.9% attendance rate matches the district average, chronic absenteeism sits at a concerning 54.8%, with Hispanic students (60.6%) missing school more than their Black peers (47.9%). Perhaps most notably, the school has achieved zero suspensions for two consecutive years — a remarkable record for any school, let alone one serving a high-need population.
With 259 students across pre-K through 5th grade, this is a small school where most families are zoned. The student body is predominantly Black (56%) and Hispanic (41%), reflecting the neighborhood demographics. Nearly 90% of students come from economically disadvantaged households, and 29% have IEPs — both well above typical rates. The diversity index sits at 44%, indicating moderate demographic variety within the school.
Bedford-Stuyvesant (West) is a transit-rich, family-oriented neighborhood in central Brooklyn with excellent subway access (86th percentile) and very high family density (92nd percentile). The area has a strong education orientation (71st percentile), though safety scores are notably low (22nd percentile). Median home values are high at $1.27 million despite a 28% poverty rate, suggesting an area in transition. Families will find good access to parks and community resources, though the low safety score is something parents consider.
The neighborhood is highly walkable with excellent transit options — families typically walk or take public transit to school, reflecting the urban, transit-oriented character of central Brooklyn.
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) · 207 families responded (90% rate)
Racial & Ethnic Diversity
NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23
Economic Need & Special Populations
Discipline
NYSED Student & Educator Database (2023-24)
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson a good school?
- On Motley, P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson 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 14 average.
- What grades does P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson serve?
- P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson serves grades Pre-K to 5.
- How do students get into P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson?
- P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson admits by zone — families living in its attendance zone are generally guaranteed a seat.
- Is P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson public, charter, or private?
- P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson is a public school in NYC Community School District 14.
- What neighborhood is P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson in?
- P.S. 023 Carter G. Woodson is in Bedford-Stuyvesant (West), Brooklyn.
Get the complete picture
Motley pulls together data from across New York City so you don’t have to. One free account, every school.
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.