Name | Popularity | Type | |
---|---|---|---|
![]() |
"Enrollment counts are based on the October 31 Audited Register for the 2017-18 to 2019-20 school years. To account for the delay in the start of the school year, enrollment counts are based on the November 13 Audited Register for 2020-21 and the November 12 Audited Register for 2021-22.
* Please note that October 31 (and November 12-13) enrollment is not audited for charter schools or Pre-K Early Education Centers (NYCEECs). Charter schools are required to submit enrollment as of BEDS Day, the first Wednesday in October, to the New York State Department of Education." Enrollment counts in the Demographic Snapshot will likely exceed operational enrollment counts due to the fact that long-term absence (LTA) students are excluded for funding purposes. Data on students with disabilities, English Language Learners, students' povery status, and students' Economic Need Value are as of the June 30 for each school year except in 2021-22. Data on SWDs, ELLs, Poverty, and ENI in the 2021-22 school year are as of March 7, 2022. 3-K and Pre-K enrollment totals include students in both full-day and half-day programs. Four-year-old students enrolled in Family Childcare Centers are categorized as 3K students for the purposes of this report. All schools listed are as of the 2021-22 school year. Schools closed before 2021-22 are not included in the school level tab but are included in the data for citywide, borough, and district. Programs and Pre-K NYC Early Education Centers (NYCEECs) are not included on the school-level tab. Due to missing demographic information in rare cases at the time of the enrollment snapshot, demographic categories do not always add up to citywide totals. Students with disabilities are defined as any child receiving an Individualized Education Program (IEP) as of the end of the school year (or March 7 for 2021-22). NYC DOE "Poverty" counts are based on the number of students with families who have qualified for free or reduced price lunch, or are eligible for Human Resources Administration (HRA) benefits. In previous years, the poverty indicator also included students enrolled in a Universal Meal School (USM), where all students automatically qualified, with the exception of middle schools, D75 schools and Pre-K centers. In 2017-18, all students in NYC schools became eligible for free lunch. In order to better reflect free and reduced price lunch status, the poverty indicator does not include student USM status, and retroactively applies this rule to previous years. "The school’s Economic Need Index is the average of its students’ Economic Need Values. The Economic Need Index (ENI) estimates the percentage of students facing economic hardship. The 2014-15 school year is the first year we provide ENI estimates. The metric is calculated as follows: * The student’s Economic Need Value is 1.0 if: o The student is eligible for public assistance from the NYC Human Resources Administration (HRA); o The student lived in temporary housing in the past four years; or o The student is in high school, has a home language other than English, and entered the NYC DOE for the first time within the last four years. * Otherwise, the student’s Economic Need Value is based on the percentage of families (with school-age children) in the student’s census tract whose income is below the poverty level, as estimated by the American Community Survey 5-Year estimate (2020 ACS estimates were used in calculations for 2021-22 ENI). The student’s Economic Need Value equals this percentage divided by 100. Due to differences in the timing of when student demographic, address and census data were pulled, ENI values may vary, slightly, from the ENI values reported in the School Quality Reports.
In previous years, student census tract data was based on students’ addresses at the time of ENI calculation. Beginning in 2018-19, census tract data is based on students’ addresses as of the Audited Register date of the given school year.
In previous years, the most recent new entry date was used for students with multiple entry dates into the NYCDOE. Beginning in 2018-19, students’ earliest entry date is used in ENI calculations.
Beginning in 2018-19, students missing ENI data are imputed with the average ENI at their school.
" In order to maintain student privacy, schools with % Poverty and ENI values below 5% or above 95% have had their exact values for each category replaced with "Below 5%" and "Above 95%", respectively. Before the start of the 2017-18 school year, the New York State Education Department implemented a new data matching process that refined the methods to identify families eligible for free lunch. This new matching system provides a more efficient and accurate process for matching students across a range of forms that families already complete. This new matching process yielded an increase in the number of students directly certified for free lunch (in other words, matched to another government program) and therefore increased the direct certification rate. As such, the increase in the percent of students in poverty and the Economic Need Index for the 2017-18 school year and later reflects this new matching process, which allows the City to better identify students eligible for free lunch. Approximately 25% of charter schools in NYC do not use NYC DOE School Food to provide meal services. The NYC DOE Office of School Food does not collect documentation on students’ eligibility for Free or Reduced Price Lunch from schools that do not utilize NYC DOE School Food. As a result, the Poverty figures may be understated for approximately 25% of charter schools. New York State Education Department begins administering assessments to be identified as an English Language Learner (ELL) in Kindergarten, but students in Pre-K are still included in the denominator for the ELL calculations. Also, Pre-K NYC Early Education Centers do not use NYC DOE School Food to provide meal services, but are included in the denominator for Poverty calculations. |
6,065 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2022 Fall Diversity in Admissions Outcomes - MS
2022 Fall Diversity in Admissions Outcomes - MS
|
1,272 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2014-2021 SHSAT OVERALL SUMMARY
2014-2021 SHSAT OVERALL SUMMARY
|
535 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2022 SHSAT + DISCOVERY OVERALL SUMMARY
2022 SHSAT + DISCOVERY OVERALL SUMMARY
|
1,993 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2,016 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
Student COVID Vaccinations (04/16 - 05/03/2022
Student COVID Vaccinations (04/16 - 05/03/2022
Education
1) Enrollment as of last day of reporting period
2) Only schools and programs in Districts 1-32 and District 75 3) NYCEECs and District PreK Centers are excluded 4) District 75 Home and Hospital Instruction programs and students are excluded 5) For consent and consent withdrawal, only Covid-19 testing eligible students are included (Grades 1-12) 6) For unvaccinated population, only students aged 5 or above as of the day before the beginning of the reporting period are included "7) Under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), educational agencies and institutions reporting or releasing data derived from education records are responsible for protecting personally identifiable information (PII) in their reports from disclosure. a) If a cell is ≤ 5 the value is suppressed (""S""), and the next highest value in that row is also suppressed (""S""). b) If a cell is within 5 of the total number of students for the subgroup, the value is suppressed (""T""), and the next highest value in that row is also suppressed (""T""). This is necessary, because it is a FERPA violation to disclose that no students in a subgroup were vaccinated. This report includes counts of unvaccinated students, therefore data suppression is necessary on the maximum values also." 8) An empty cell indicates that there are no students for that grade or subgroup |
1,075 views |
![]() |
![]() |
The workshop provides an overview of the DOE policies related to New York State’s Dignity for All Students Act, with a focus on Chancellor’s Regulations A-832-Student to Student Discrimination, Harassment, Intimidation, and/or Bullying and A-831-Student to Student Sexual Harassment as well as the Staff to Student Discrimination and Sexual Harassment components of Chancellor’s Regulation A-830. Participants will also learn about the protected classifications for students and staff, their reporting responsibilities and under what circumstances off-school premises behavior is covered under Chancellor’s Regulations. |
198 views |
![]() |
![]() |
221 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
2021 - 2022 Class Size Distribution by District
2021 - 2022 Class Size Distribution by District
Education
|
538 views |
![]() |
![]() |
357 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
2021 - 2022 Class Size Distribution by Borough
2021 - 2022 Class Size Distribution by Borough
Education
|
343 views |
![]() |
![]() |
1,180 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
384 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
298 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
337 views |
![]() |
|
![]() |
2017-2018 School Quality Report - District 75 Schools
2017-2018 School Quality Report - District 75 Schools
Education
New York City Department of Education 2017 - 2018 School Quality Report Results for District 75 Schools.
The Quality Review is a process that evaluates how well schools are organized to support student learning and teacher practice. It was developed to assist New York City Department of Education (NYCDOE) schools in raising student achievement by looking behind a school’s performance statistics to ensure that the school is engaged in effective methods of accelerating student learning. |
340 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2017-2018 Students with Multiple Removals or Suspensions - Year of Birth
2017-2018 Students with Multiple Removals or Suspensions - Year of Birth
Education
|
184 views |
![]() |
![]() |
Local Law 60 enacted in 2011 requires the Chancellor of the New York City School District to submit to the Council an annual report concerning school capacity and utilization data for the prior school year. This report consists of four tabs:
1. Summary Information - Count of each type of room assigned to each school by building, and whether any of those rooms are shared. 2. Room Detail Information - Includes the room number and square footage of each room type assigned to each school by building, and whether that room is shared. Rooms shared by some or all schools in the building are only listed once but should be tagged as “shared.” 3. Bathroom and Non-instructional Space by Building Information - Includes the number of student bathrooms in each building, whether they are open all the time, whether any bathrooms are shared, the number of non-instructional spaces used for instruction or other student services, and whether any of those non-instructional spaces are shared. 4. Meal Periods - Data reported is for the 2020-2021 school year. 45 minutes is used as the standard period length. For records with no meal periods, 1 period used as default for breakfast, 2 for lunch. All full Breakfast in the Classroom (BIC) schools do not contain a breakfast period. Some schools have a hybrid breakfast that includes both a breakfast period and BIC. These schools are noted by listing the breakfast period and ""/BIC"" in column H- ""Meals"". |
71 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2016-17 - 2020-21 School End-of-Year Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
2016-17 - 2020-21 School End-of-Year Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
Education
Overall attendance data include students in Districts 1-32 and 75 (Special Education). Students in District 79 (Alternative Schools & Programs), charter schools, home schooling, and home and hospital instruction are excluded. Pre-K data do not include NYC Early Education Centers or District Pre-K Centers; therefore, Pre-K data are limited to those who attend K-12 schools that offer Pre-K. Transfer schools are included in citywide, borough, and district counts but removed from school-level files.
Attendance is attributed to the school the student attended at the time. If a student attends multiple schools in a school year, the student will contribute data towards multiple schools. Starting in 2020-21, the NYC DOE transitioned to NYSED's definition of chronic absenteeism. Students are considered chronically absent if they have an attendance of 90 percent or less (i.e. students who are absent 10 percent or more of the total days). In order to be included in chronic absenteeism calculations, students must be enrolled for at least 10 days (regardless of whether present or absent) and must have been present for at least 1 day. The NYSED chronic absenteeism definition is applied to all prior years in the report. School-level chronic absenteeism data reflect chronic absenteeism at a particular school. In order to eliminate double-counting students in chronic absenteeism counts, calculations at the district, borough, and citywide levels include all attendance data that contribute to the given geographic category. For example, if a student was chronically absent at one school but not at another, the student would only be counted once in the citywide calculation. For this reason, chronic absenteeism counts will not align across files. All demographic data are based on a student's most recent record in a given year. Students With Disabilities (SWD) data do not include Pre-K students since Pre-K students are screened for IEPs only at the parents' request. English language learner (ELL) data do not include Pre-K students since the New York State Education Department only begins administering assessments to be identified as an ELL in Kindergarten. Only grades PK-12 are shown, but calculations for "All Grades" also include students missing a grade level, so PK-12 may not add up to "All Grades". Data include students missing a gender, but are not shown due to small cell counts. Data for Asian students include Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islanders . Multi-racial and Native American students, as well as students missing ethnicity/race data are included in the "Other" ethnicity category. In order to comply with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) regulations on public reporting of education outcomes, rows with five or fewer students are suppressed, and have been replaced with an "s". Using total days of attendance as a proxy , rows with 900 or fewer total days are suppressed. In addition, other rows have been replaced with an "s" when they could reveal, through addition or subtraction, the underlying numbers that have been redacted. Chronic absenteeism values are suppressed, regardless of total days, if the number of students who contribute at least 20 days is five or fewer. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting shift to remote learning in March 2020, 2019-20 attendance data was only available for September 2019 through March 13, 2020. Interactions data from the spring of 2020 are reported on a separate tab. Interactions were reported by schools during remote learning, from April 6 2020 through June 26 2020 (a total of 57 instructional days, excluding special professional development days of June 4 and June 9). Schools were required to indicate any student from their roster that did not have an interaction on a given day. Schools were able to define interactions in a way that made sense for their students and families. Definitions of an interaction included: • Student submission of an assignment or completion of an assessment, in whichever manner the school is collecting • Student participation in an online forum, chat log, or discussion thread • Student/family phone call, email or response to teacher email • Phone, email, and/or other digital communication with a family member which confirms student interaction/engagement • Other evidence of participation as determined by the principal. Interactions data are attributed to students' school of record on a given day. A student participating in a Shared Instruction (SHIN) model may have recorded interactions at multiple schools on a given day, but only one record is counted for the interaction rate, attributed to students' school of record for that day. Due to the shift to hybrid learning, attendance data for the 2020-21 school year include both in-person and remote instruction. Total days, days absent, and days present fields include both in-person and remote attendance. More information on attendance policies can be found here: https://www.schools.nyc.gov/school-life/rules-for-students/attendance |
3,036 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2016-17 - 2020-21 District End-of-Year Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
2016-17 - 2020-21 District End-of-Year Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
Education
Overall attendance data include students in Districts 1-32 and 75 (Special Education). Students in District 79 (Alternative Schools & Programs), charter schools, home schooling, and home and hospital instruction are excluded. Pre-K data do not include NYC Early Education Centers or District Pre-K Centers; therefore, Pre-K data are limited to those who attend K-12 schools that offer Pre-K. Transfer schools are included in citywide, borough, and district counts but removed from school-level files.
Attendance is attributed to the school the student attended at the time. If a student attends multiple schools in a school year, the student will contribute data towards multiple schools. Starting in 2020-21, the NYC DOE transitioned to NYSED's definition of chronic absenteeism. Students are considered chronically absent if they have an attendance of 90 percent or less (i.e. students who are absent 10 percent or more of the total days). In order to be included in chronic absenteeism calculations, students must be enrolled for at least 10 days (regardless of whether present or absent) and must have been present for at least 1 day. The NYSED chronic absenteeism definition is applied to all prior years in the report. School-level chronic absenteeism data reflect chronic absenteeism at a particular school. In order to eliminate double-counting students in chronic absenteeism counts, calculations at the district, borough, and citywide levels include all attendance data that contribute to the given geographic category. For example, if a student was chronically absent at one school but not at another, the student would only be counted once in the citywide calculation. For this reason, chronic absenteeism counts will not align across files. All demographic data are based on a student's most recent record in a given year. Students With Disabilities (SWD) data do not include Pre-K students since Pre-K students are screened for IEPs only at the parents' request. English language learner (ELL) data do not include Pre-K students since the New York State Education Department only begins administering assessments to be identified as an ELL in Kindergarten. Only grades PK-12 are shown, but calculations for "All Grades" also include students missing a grade level, so PK-12 may not add up to "All Grades". Data include students missing a gender, but are not shown due to small cell counts. Data for Asian students include Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islanders . Multi-racial and Native American students, as well as students missing ethnicity/race data are included in the "Other" ethnicity category. In order to comply with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) regulations on public reporting of education outcomes, rows with five or fewer students are suppressed, and have been replaced with an "s". Using total days of attendance as a proxy , rows with 900 or fewer total days are suppressed. In addition, other rows have been replaced with an "s" when they could reveal, through addition or subtraction, the underlying numbers that have been redacted. Chronic absenteeism values are suppressed, regardless of total days, if the number of students who contribute at least 20 days is five or fewer. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting shift to remote learning in March 2020, 2019-20 attendance data was only available for September 2019 through March 13, 2020. Interactions data from the spring of 2020 are reported on a separate tab. Interactions were reported by schools during remote learning, from April 6 2020 through June 26 2020 (a total of 57 instructional days, excluding special professional development days of June 4 and June 9). Schools were required to indicate any student from their roster that did not have an interaction on a given day. Schools were able to define interactions in a way that made sense for their students and families. Definitions of an interaction included: • Student submission of an assignment or completion of an assessment, in whichever manner the school is collecting • Student participation in an online forum, chat log, or discussion thread • Student/family phone call, email or response to teacher email • Phone, email, and/or other digital communication with a family member which confirms student interaction/engagement • Other evidence of participation as determined by the principal. Interactions data are attributed to students' school of record on a given day. A student participating in a Shared Instruction (SHIN) model may have recorded interactions at multiple schools on a given day, but only one record is counted for the interaction rate, attributed to students' school of record for that day. Due to the shift to hybrid learning, attendance data for the 2020-21 school year include both in-person and remote instruction. Total days, days absent, and days present fields include both in-person and remote attendance. More information on attendance policies can be found here: https://www.schools.nyc.gov/school-life/rules-for-students/attendance |
1,164 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2016-17 - 2020-21 Citywide End-of-Year Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
2016-17 - 2020-21 Citywide End-of-Year Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
Education
Overall attendance data include students in Districts 1-32 and 75 (Special Education). Students in District 79 (Alternative Schools & Programs), charter schools, home schooling, and home and hospital instruction are excluded. Pre-K data do not include NYC Early Education Centers or District Pre-K Centers; therefore, Pre-K data are limited to those who attend K-12 schools that offer Pre-K. Transfer schools are included in citywide, borough, and district counts but removed from school-level files.
Attendance is attributed to the school the student attended at the time. If a student attends multiple schools in a school year, the student will contribute data towards multiple schools. Starting in 2020-21, the NYC DOE transitioned to NYSED's definition of chronic absenteeism. Students are considered chronically absent if they have an attendance of 90 percent or less (i.e. students who are absent 10 percent or more of the total days). In order to be included in chronic absenteeism calculations, students must be enrolled for at least 10 days (regardless of whether present or absent) and must have been present for at least 1 day. The NYSED chronic absenteeism definition is applied to all prior years in the report. School-level chronic absenteeism data reflect chronic absenteeism at a particular school. In order to eliminate double-counting students in chronic absenteeism counts, calculations at the district, borough, and citywide levels include all attendance data that contribute to the given geographic category. For example, if a student was chronically absent at one school but not at another, the student would only be counted once in the citywide calculation. For this reason, chronic absenteeism counts will not align across files. All demographic data are based on a student's most recent record in a given year. Students With Disabilities (SWD) data do not include Pre-K students since Pre-K students are screened for IEPs only at the parents' request. English language learner (ELL) data do not include Pre-K students since the New York State Education Department only begins administering assessments to be identified as an ELL in Kindergarten. Only grades PK-12 are shown, but calculations for "All Grades" also include students missing a grade level, so PK-12 may not add up to "All Grades". Data include students missing a gender, but are not shown due to small cell counts. Data for Asian students include Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islanders . Multi-racial and Native American students, as well as students missing ethnicity/race data are included in the "Other" ethnicity category. In order to comply with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) regulations on public reporting of education outcomes, rows with five or fewer students are suppressed, and have been replaced with an "s". Using total days of attendance as a proxy , rows with 900 or fewer total days are suppressed. In addition, other rows have been replaced with an "s" when they could reveal, through addition or subtraction, the underlying numbers that have been redacted. Chronic absenteeism values are suppressed, regardless of total days, if the number of students who contribute at least 20 days is five or fewer. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting shift to remote learning in March 2020, 2019-20 attendance data was only available for September 2019 through March 13, 2020. Interactions data from the spring of 2020 are reported on a separate tab. Interactions were reported by schools during remote learning, from April 6 2020 through June 26 2020 (a total of 57 instructional days, excluding special professional development days of June 4 and June 9). Schools were required to indicate any student from their roster that did not have an interaction on a given day. Schools were able to define interactions in a way that made sense for their students and families. Definitions of an interaction included: • Student submission of an assignment or completion of an assessment, in whichever manner the school is collecting • Student participation in an online forum, chat log, or discussion thread • Student/family phone call, email or response to teacher email • Phone, email, and/or other digital communication with a family member which confirms student interaction/engagement • Other evidence of participation as determined by the principal. Interactions data are attributed to students' school of record on a given day. A student participating in a Shared Instruction (SHIN) model may have recorded interactions at multiple schools on a given day, but only one record is counted for the interaction rate, attributed to students' school of record for that day. Due to the shift to hybrid learning, attendance data for the 2020-21 school year include both in-person and remote instruction. Total days, days absent, and days present fields include both in-person and remote attendance. More information on attendance policies can be found here: https://www.schools.nyc.gov/school-life/rules-for-students/attendance |
1,866 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2016-17 - 2020-21 End-of-Year Borough Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
2016-17 - 2020-21 End-of-Year Borough Attendance and Chronic Absenteeism Data
Education
Overall attendance data include students in Districts 1-32 and 75 (Special Education). Students in District 79 (Alternative Schools & Programs), charter schools, home schooling, and home and hospital instruction are excluded. Pre-K data do not include NYC Early Education Centers or District Pre-K Centers; therefore, Pre-K data are limited to those who attend K-12 schools that offer Pre-K. Transfer schools are included in citywide, borough, and district counts but removed from school-level files.
Attendance is attributed to the school the student attended at the time. If a student attends multiple schools in a school year, the student will contribute data towards multiple schools. Starting in 2020-21, the NYC DOE transitioned to NYSED's definition of chronic absenteeism. Students are considered chronically absent if they have an attendance of 90 percent or less (i.e. students who are absent 10 percent or more of the total days). In order to be included in chronic absenteeism calculations, students must be enrolled for at least 10 days (regardless of whether present or absent) and must have been present for at least 1 day. The NYSED chronic absenteeism definition is applied to all prior years in the report. School-level chronic absenteeism data reflect chronic absenteeism at a particular school. In order to eliminate double-counting students in chronic absenteeism counts, calculations at the district, borough, and citywide levels include all attendance data that contribute to the given geographic category. For example, if a student was chronically absent at one school but not at another, the student would only be counted once in the citywide calculation. For this reason, chronic absenteeism counts will not align across files. All demographic data are based on a student's most recent record in a given year. Students With Disabilities (SWD) data do not include Pre-K students since Pre-K students are screened for IEPs only at the parents' request. English language learner (ELL) data do not include Pre-K students since the New York State Education Department only begins administering assessments to be identified as an ELL in Kindergarten. Only grades PK-12 are shown, but calculations for "All Grades" also include students missing a grade level, so PK-12 may not add up to "All Grades". Data include students missing a gender, but are not shown due to small cell counts. Data for Asian students include Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islanders . Multi-racial and Native American students, as well as students missing ethnicity/race data are included in the "Other" ethnicity category. In order to comply with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) regulations on public reporting of education outcomes, rows with five or fewer students are suppressed, and have been replaced with an "s". Using total days of attendance as a proxy , rows with 900 or fewer total days are suppressed. In addition, other rows have been replaced with an "s" when they could reveal, through addition or subtraction, the underlying numbers that have been redacted. Chronic absenteeism values are suppressed, regardless of total days, if the number of students who contribute at least 20 days is five or fewer. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting shift to remote learning in March 2020, 2019-20 attendance data was only available for September 2019 through March 13, 2020. Interactions data from the spring of 2020 are reported on a separate tab. Interactions were reported by schools during remote learning, from April 6 2020 through June 26 2020 (a total of 57 instructional days, excluding special professional development days of June 4 and June 9). Schools were required to indicate any student from their roster that did not have an interaction on a given day. Schools were able to define interactions in a way that made sense for their students and families. Definitions of an interaction included: • Student submission of an assignment or completion of an assessment, in whichever manner the school is collecting • Student participation in an online forum, chat log, or discussion thread • Student/family phone call, email or response to teacher email • Phone, email, and/or other digital communication with a family member which confirms student interaction/engagement • Other evidence of participation as determined by the principal. Interactions data are attributed to students' school of record on a given day. A student participating in a Shared Instruction (SHIN) model may have recorded interactions at multiple schools on a given day, but only one record is counted for the interaction rate, attributed to students' school of record for that day. Due to the shift to hybrid learning, attendance data for the 2020-21 school year include both in-person and remote instruction. Total days, days absent, and days present fields include both in-person and remote attendance. More information on attendance policies can be found here: https://www.schools.nyc.gov/school-life/rules-for-students/attendance |
714 views |
![]() |
![]() |
2017-2018 Local Law 15 Health Instructor - Professional
2017-2018 Local Law 15 Health Instructor - Professional
Education
Local Law 15 (2016) requires that the NYCDOE provide citywide Health Education Instructor data, disaggregated by community school district, city council district, and each individual school Data reported in this report is from the 2017-18 school year. Counts of the total number of unique instructors attending professional development is from 2016 to 2018 (2 years). In order to calculate the percentage of instructors attending multiple sessions of professional development, the NYCDOE used the 2017-18 number of instructors as the denominator to reflect that instructors could have attended professional development in years prior. |
82 views |
![]() |
![]() |
1) Register is as of reporting date
2) Only includes schools and programs in Districts 1-32 and District 75 3) NYCEECs and District PreK Centers are excluded 4) District 75 Home and Hospital Instruction programs and students are excluded 5) Percents are of active students ages 5 and up, not of all students (any four year olds are exluded as they are not yet eligible for vaccination) 1) Enrollment as of last day of reporting period 2) Only schools and programs in Districts 1-32 and District 75 3) NYCEECs and District PreK Centers are excluded 4) District 75 Home and Hospital Instruction programs and students are excluded 5) For consent and consent withdrawal, only Covid-19 testing eligible students are included (Grades 1-12) 6) For unvaccinated population, only students aged 5 or above as of the day before the beginning of the reporting period are included "7) Under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), educational agencies and institutions reporting or releasing data derived from education records are responsible for protecting personally identifiable information (PII) in their reports from disclosure. a) If a cell is ≤ 5 the value is suppressed (""S""), and the next highest value in that row is also suppressed (""S""). b) If a cell is within 5 of the total number of students for the subgroup, the value is suppressed (""T""), and the next highest value in that row is also suppressed (""T""). This is necessary, because it is a FERPA violation to disclose that no students in a subgroup were vaccinated. This report includes counts of unvaccinated students, therefore data suppression is necessary on the maximum values also." 8) An empty cell indicates that there are no students for that grade or subgroup |
368 views |
![]() |
![]() |
1) Enrollment as of last day of reporting period
2) Only schools and programs in Districts 1-32 and District 75 3) NYCEECs and District PreK Centers are excluded 4) District 75 Home and Hospital Instruction programs and students are excluded 5) For consent and consent withdrawal, only Covid-19 testing eligible students are included (Grades 1-12) 6) For unvaccinated population, only students aged 5 or above as of the day before the beginning of the reporting period are included "7) Under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), educational agencies and institutions reporting or releasing data derived from education records are responsible for protecting personally identifiable information (PII) in their reports from disclosure. a) If a cell is ≤ 5 the value is suppressed (""S""), and the next highest value in that row is also suppressed (""S""). b) If a cell is within 5 of the total number of students for the subgroup, the value is suppressed (""T""), and the next highest value in that row is also suppressed (""T""). This is necessary, because it is a FERPA violation to disclose that no students in a subgroup were vaccinated. This report includes counts of unvaccinated students, therefore data suppression is necessary on the maximum values also." 8) An empty cell indicates that there are no students for that grade or subgroup |
782 views |
![]() |