At a Glance
A zoned neighborhood school climbing back from pandemic setbacks with exceptional family trust but real attendance challenges
Families who value a tight-knit, high-trust school community with strong teacher relationships and are prepared to actively address attendance challenges. Works well for students who thrive in environments with lower suspension rates and restorative discipline. Parents should be realistic about academic benchmarks relative to district peers and consider whether the school's recovery trajectory aligns with their expectations.
- Near-universal parent and teacher trust (95-98% across metrics)
- Exceptional teacher-reported safety (100%)
- Strong academic recovery trajectory post-pandemic
- Above-average program richness (80/100) including arts, STEM, and college-prep coursework
- Very low suspension rate (0%) indicating restorative discipline approach
- Chronic absenteeism at 47.6% is a serious issue affecting nearly half the student body
- Test scores still significantly trail district averages
- PTA fundraising is minimal ($42/student) compared to district peers
- Located in a district dominated by high-performing charter schools that may outcompete for families
- Safety indicators in the surrounding neighborhood score low
Based on 2024-2025 data
School SummaryDistrict 3
District 3 is among the city's most competitive for elementary schools, home to top-ranked schools like Special Music School (100/100), The Anderson School (98/100), and multiple Success Academy charters scoring in the 90s. P.S. 180's 1.53 overall score places it near the bottom of this competitive landscape. However, the school's exceptional culture climate scores and recovery trajectory may appeal to families prioritizing relationship-heavy environments over raw test performance.
Test scores remain below the District 3 average — 45.5% ELA versus 59% districtwide, and 31.2% Math versus 54% — placing this school in the lower tier academically. However, the trajectory tells a recovery story: math climbed from 16.5% in 2022 to 34.2% in 2024 before dipping slightly, while ELA steadily improved each year. Grade-level data shows older students performing stronger (Grade 5 at 57.6% ELA) than third graders (38.1%), suggesting the school may be rebuilding from the bottom up. The overall quality score of 1.53 out of 4 reflects these struggles relative to peer schools.
This is where P.S. 180 shines. Parent satisfaction hits 95%, and trust metrics are nearly universal: 98% of parents trust teachers and the principal, 96% of teachers trust the principal, and 100% of teachers report feeling safe at school. These numbers arewell above district averages and suggest a genuinely warm, connected school culture. Discipline is minimal — just one suspension last year, down from five the prior year. The challenge is attendance: 47.6% chronic absenteeism is alarmingly high, with particularly severe rates among white students (70.8%) and female students (51.7%). The school is outperforming academically while struggling to get kids in seats consistently.
With 397 students, P.S. 180 is a small-to-medium zoned school reflecting its neighborhood's demographics: 49% Black, 31% Hispanic, 14% white, and 3% Asian. The economic need index of 74.3% indicates high poverty, and 22% of students have IEPs. The diversity index of 66% is moderate. Parent fundraising is modest at $42 per student versus a district average of $627, suggesting fewer resources for enrichment beyond what the school provides directly.
Harlem is a densely populated, transit-rich neighborhood with an education orientation score of 76.25 and family density in the 95th percentile — meaning many families with children. The area has excellent subway access (98.85 transit score) but scores poorly on safety indicators (1.15). Median home values are over $1.3 million though homeownership is low at 18.2%, indicating a predominantly renter population. The neighborhood offers cultural resources and community institutions, though parents should be aware of the safety context.
The school is highly accessible by subway given the 98.85 transit score, though families walking should be mindful of neighborhood safety conditions. Many students arrive from the surrounding blocks in this densely populated area.
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) · 63 families responded (19% rate)
Programs & Activities
Racial & Ethnic Diversity
NYC DOE InfoHub · 2022-23
PTA Fundraising
Source: DOE Local Law 171 disclosure
Economic Need & Special Populations
Discipline
NYSED Student & Educator Database (2023-24)
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is P.S. 180 Hugo Newman a good school?
- On Motley, P.S. 180 Hugo Newman earns an overall quality score of 38/100 — a blend of New York State ELA and math results, attendance, and the school-climate survey. Its state test results run below the District 3 average.
- What grades does P.S. 180 Hugo Newman serve?
- P.S. 180 Hugo Newman serves grades Pre-K to 5.
- How do students get into P.S. 180 Hugo Newman?
- P.S. 180 Hugo Newman is a screened school — it admits by application, weighing grades, attendance, and sometimes a test or interview.
- Is P.S. 180 Hugo Newman public, charter, or private?
- P.S. 180 Hugo Newman is a public school in NYC Community School District 3.
- What neighborhood is P.S. 180 Hugo Newman in?
- P.S. 180 Hugo Newman is in Harlem (South), Manhattan.
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