At a Glance
A neighborhood zoned elementary with strong family-teacher relationships and improving academics, set in a transit-rich, family-dense part of Flatbush
Families who prioritize a warm, trusting school community over top test scores — especially those with children who need strong relationships or have IEPs. Parents willing to actively address chronic absenteeism challenges will find a school that handles behavior well and has improving academics. Not ideal for families seeking the highest-performing math instruction or robust PTA-funded enrichment.
- Exceptional family-teacher relationships: 100% report strong relationships, 99% parent-teacher trust
- Zero suspensions for three years running — a notably calm discipline environment
- Significant academic turnaround: 20+ point gains in both ELA and math since 2019
- Grade 4 ELA at nearly 72% — a standout performance in the upper elementary years
- High trust environment: teachers give 100% trust rating for principal
- Chronic absenteeism at 71.7% is a major concern — nearly three-quarters of students miss significant school time
- Math proficiency at 52.3% lags significantly behind district average of 60.5%
- PTA fundraising is very low ($15/student vs $56 district average), potentially limiting enrichment resources
- One quarter of students have IEPs — strong special education programming is in place, but class sizes may feel larger for general ed families
- Safety perception in the surrounding neighborhood is low (5.36/100) — families should walk the area personally
Based on 2024-25 data
School SummaryDistrict 22
Among district peer schools, P.S. 245 doesn't crack the top tier — Success Academy schools in the area score in the 80s and 90s, and P.S. 195 Manhattan Beach scores 85. But within the zoned neighborhood school category, P.S. 245 offers something those charters and screened schools don't: a true community school with open enrollment and relationships that families rate almost perfectly. It's not the highest-performing, but it's a school where families feel genuinely welcomed.
P.S. 245's 62.8% ELA proficiency sits just above the district average of 61%, while math at 52.3% lags behind the district's 60.5%. The trajectory is the real story: from 2019's 42% ELA and 42% math to today's numbers, the school has added 20+ percentage points in both subjects. Grade 4 stands out with nearly 72% ELA proficiency, suggesting strong upper-elementary instruction. The 2.3 overall score is slightly below the district average of 2.43 — not bad, but not leading the pack either.
The survey data here is extraordinary — 94% of families report satisfaction, 99% trust between parents and teachers, and 100% report strong relationships. Teachers give 98% on safety and 100% on their trust in leadership. There's been not a single suspension in three years, which reflects either incredibly effective behavior management or very low-level issues — likely both. But here's the tension: chronic absenteeism sits at a staggering 71.7%, running highest among Black students at 77.7%. That's a disconnect worth understanding: families clearly trust the school (the survey numbers are glowing), but something is preventing kids from showing up consistently.
The school is 50% Black and 43% Hispanic, with 4% Native American students — a predominantly students-of-color community in a neighborhood that's also diverse. The economic need index of 78.3% indicates significant poverty, and a quarter of students have IEPs. The diversity index of 55% reflects this mix. PTA fundraising is minimal at $15 per student (well below the district average of $56), which may affect enrichment offerings but doesn't appear to have dampened the strong community feel captured in surveys.
Flatbush is a high-density, transit-rich neighborhood where families are everywhere — it scores in the 90th percentile for family density and has excellent subway access (78th percentile). The tradeoff is a very low safety score (5.36 out of 100), which is something families live with daily in this area. Homeownership is low at 13%, meaning most families rent. Median home values approach $900,000, creating pressure even for families who own. The education orientation score of 55% suggests this is a working-class neighborhood where school isn't necessarily the central community focus, though the presence of families is undeniable.
Given the neighborhood's high family density and strong transit scores, most students likely walk or take public transportation. The area is pedestrian-heavy with shops and services along commercial corridors.
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) · 216 families responded (99% rate)
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. 245 a good school?
- On Motley, P.S. 245 earns an overall quality score of 57/100 — 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 22 average.
- What grades does P.S. 245 serve?
- P.S. 245 serves grades Pre-K to 5.
- How do students get into P.S. 245?
- P.S. 245 admits by zone — families living in its attendance zone are generally guaranteed a seat.
- Is P.S. 245 public, charter, or private?
- P.S. 245 is a public school in NYC Community School District 22.
- What neighborhood is P.S. 245 in?
- P.S. 245 is in Flatbush, Brooklyn.
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