Motley
District 1010
PublicDistrict 10Zoned

P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight

2424 JEROME AVENUE

At a Glance

A neighborhood school with deeply engaged families navigating academic challenges in a high-need community

Best suited for

Families zoned for P.S. 033 who prioritize a warm, relationship-centered school environment and are committed to supporting their child's academic growth at home. Families who value strong parent-teacher partnerships and want their child in a school with minimal punitive discipline may find this fits well. Families seeking higher test scores or stronger academic performance metrics should carefully weigh whether this school meets their child's needs or consider district transfer options.

What stands out
  • Zero suspensions for three consecutive years — an exceptional discipline record
  • 100% of families report strong relationships with the school community
  • Parent-teacher trust at 96% — families feel heard and valued
  • Very high parent satisfaction (90%) despite academic challenges
  • Robust special education programming serving 19% of students
Things to consider
  • Test scores significantly lag behind District 10 averages — students are performing well below their peers in nearby schools
  • Chronic absenteeism affects half the student body, which disrupts learning and explains score volatility
  • Teacher-reported safety (76%) is notably lower than district average and family perceptions — there may be day-to-day concerns not visible to parents
  • Academic performance has been inconsistent for nearly a decade with no clear upward trend
  • The neighborhood has significant safety and environmental health concerns

Based on 2024-2025 data

School SummaryDistrict 10

Among peer schools in District 10, P.S. 033 ranks below alternatives including P.S. 024 Spuyten Duyvil (92/100), P.S. 081 Robert J. Christen (88/100), and Milton Fein (73/100). The school's overall quality score of 1.24 places it in the bottom tier of the district. Families with options in the area may find higher-performing alternatives, though those schools typically have different demographics and may not serve the same zoned population.

AcademicsImproving

Test scores at P.S. 033 hover well below the District 10 average — ELA proficiency of 29.9% versus the district's 45% and math at 32.1% versus 43.5% — placing the school in the lower tier locally. The academic trajectory has been uneven: scores climbed from 2016 to 2018, dipped in 2019, recovered partially in 2022-2023, then dipped again in 2024 before rebounding slightly in 2025. This volatility suggests the school lacks consistent instructional momentum. However, Grade 5 students show stronger ELA performance (37.3%) than younger grades, indicating some growth occurs over time. With an overall quality score of 1.24 out of 4, the school is performing significantly below the district average of 1.77.

Culturemoderate

The survey data tells a nuanced story. Parents are overwhelmingly positive: 90% satisfaction, 96% parent-teacher trust, and 100% rating on strong relationships. Teachers report 87% instruction quality and 80% trust in leadership. However, teacher-reported safety sits at 76% — notably below both the district average of 87% and what families perceive. Attendance is a genuine concern: the 87.2% attendance rate falls below the district average, and a striking 50.4% of students are chronically absent, with Hispanic students (51.3%) and Native American students (53.3%) most affected. On the positive side, the school has maintained a zero suspension rate for three consecutive years — a rare achievement that suggests restorative practices or strong relationship-based discipline. The day-to-day feel appears warm family-centered, but the chronic absenteeism and lower safety perceptions signal underlying challenges families are navigating.

Community

The student body is 89% Hispanic and 9% Black, reflecting the Fordham Heights neighborhood's demographics. With an economic need index of 93 (the highest category), nearly all students face economic hardship. One in five students has an IEP, suggesting robust special education services. The diversity index is low at 25%, meaning the community is relatively homogeneous — families here share similar backgrounds and challenges. Class sizes average 22.9, matching the district average exactly.

NeighborhoodFordham Heights

Fordham Heights is a high-density, transit-rich neighborhood in the central Bronx. Families score the area high on transit access (85th percentile) and family density (94th percentile), meaning lots of kids live nearby and getting around by bus or train is easy. However, the safety score is 0 — the lowest possible — with high crime density and elevated environmental health risks (high PM2.5 levels and lead exposure rates). The neighborhood has very low homeownership (1.1%), minimal college-educated residents (11.4%), and an education orientation score of just 8. Parents should know this is a neighborhood where families are navigating significant resource constraints.

Given the high transit score and low car ownership in the area, most families likely walk or take public transit. The Jerome Avenue location is accessible by several bus routes.

Academic Performance

ELA Proficiency

29.9%

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

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Math Proficiency

32.1%

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

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Survey Results

Family Feedback
Satisfaction
90%
Teacher Trust
96%
Principal Trust
93%
Relationships
100%
Teacher Perspective
Instruction
87%
Principal Trust
80%
Collegial Trust
83%
Safety
76%

NYC School Survey (2025) · 306 families responded (40% rate)

Racial & Ethnic Diversity

Low
89%Hispanic/Latino
9%Black
1%Native American

NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23

Economic Need & Special Populations

Economic Need Index
93%
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 P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight a good school?
On Motley, P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight earns an overall quality score of 31/100 — a blend of New York State ELA and math results, attendance, and the school-climate survey. Its state test results run below the District 10 average.
What grades does P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight serve?
P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight serves grades Pre-K to 5.
How do students get into P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight?
P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight admits by zone — families living in its attendance zone are generally guaranteed a seat.
Is P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight public, charter, or private?
P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight is a public school in NYC Community School District 10.
What neighborhood is P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight in?
P.S. 033 Timothy Dwight is in Fordham Heights, Bronx.
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