At a Glance
A community-rooted elementary school where strong family-teacher bonds offset chronic absenteeism challenges
Families who prioritize a warm, trusting school community with strong parent-teacher bonds over top test scores — and who can actively support their children's attendance. Works well for families who value zero-exclusion discipline and want a school where their child is known, but parents should be prepared to be proactive about attendance and academic support.
- Zero suspensions for three consecutive years — a discipline philosophy worth discussing at intake
- Parent trust metrics are exceptional: 97% trust the principal, 91% satisfied overall
- Teacher-reported safety at 97% — staff feel secure
- Strong relationships score of 93% on surveys — families and staff feel connected
- Math scores have more than doubled since 2016, showing sustained improvement trajectory
- Chronic absenteeism at 60% is significantly above normal — ask the school what supports they offer
- Test scores lag behind district averages in both subjects
- Teacher instruction quality (81%) is notably below district average (90%)
- PTA fundraising is below district average — fewer extras funded by families
- IEP population at 22% is substantial — understand how inclusion works here
- Black students have significantly higher chronic absenteeism (70.8%) than Hispanic students (40.4%) — equity in attendance support matters
Based on 2024-2025 data
School SummaryDistrict 22
Against district peers like Success Academy schools scoring 86-89 and top district schools at 78-85, this school with a 1.92/4 overall score sits in the lower tier. However, peer school scores don't capture the relational strengths and discipline record that longtime families cite as reasons they stay.
ELA proficiency at 46.8% and math at 49.2% place this school below the district averages of 61% and 60.5% respectively, meaning students are working catch up rather than leading. However, the trajectory shows real progress: math has more than doubled from 23.9% in 2016 to 49.2% in 2025, while ELA climbed from 35.7% to 46.8% over the same period. The 2022 COVID dip was steep — ELA dropped to 32.9% — but the school has clawed back. Grade-level data shows Grade 5 leading in ELA (48.9%) while Grade 4 trails slightly in both subjects, suggesting some grade-level inconsistency in instruction or supports.
The numbers here tell a story of strong relational foundation: 97% of parents trust the principal, 91% are satisfied overall, and 97% of teachers report feeling safe. That's exceptional. But the attendance picture is concerning — 60% chronic absenteeism is far above typical, with Black students at 70.8% versus Hispanic students at 40.4%, suggesting uneven family capacity to get kids to school consistently. The school has zero suspensions across three consecutive years, which reflects either effective behavior management or a philosophy of keeping kids in class — worth asking about at intake. Teacher instruction quality scores 81%, below the district's 89.8%, which may connect to the attendance challenges or staffing consistency.
With 528 students in grades PK-5, this is a mid-sized elementary school. The student body is 49% Black, 27% Hispanic, 12% Asian, and 9% White — more Black and Hispanic than the neighborhood's already diverse makeup suggests. Twenty-two percent have IEPs, and 79.2% come from high-economic-need households. PTA fundraising is modest at $35 per student versus the district average of $56, suggesting fewer discretionary resources for enrichment — a tradeoff families should factor in.
Flatbush is a high-family-density neighborhood (89.66 percentile) with decent transit access but real safety concerns. Median home values are high at $888,285, yet homeownership is low at 13.3%, meaning most families rent — which can mean less stability and more transience, potentially feeding into attendance challenges. The neighborhood scores poorly on safety indicators (low percentile) and stability (16.09), which shapes what parents experience getting their kids to and from school daily.
Families walk and take transit in this dense urban neighborhood; the area is walkable but parents factor in safety considerations, especially around commute times.
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) · 288 families responded (56% 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. K315 a good school?
- On Motley, P.S. K315 earns an overall quality score of 48/100 — a blend of New York State ELA and math results, attendance, and the school-climate survey. Its state test results run below the District 22 average.
- What grades does P.S. K315 serve?
- P.S. K315 serves grades Pre-K to 5.
- Is P.S. K315 public, charter, or private?
- P.S. K315 is a public school in NYC Community School District 22.
- What neighborhood is P.S. K315 in?
- P.S. K315 is in Flatbush, Brooklyn.
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