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Bronx Subway Station Locations
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2016-08-27T18:51:41.000ZBronx Subway Station Locations
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State Assembly District 81
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2016-10-27T15:46:59.000ZState Assembly District 81
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2009-2010 Class Size School level Detail - Visualized
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2016-09-12T23:54:55.000Z - API
Districts with Schools
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2016-08-26T23:02:19.000ZSchool districts and 2010 Census tract boundaries. Designed to evaluate which census tracts are in which school district.
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Bronx Public School Math Results 2006
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2013-09-04T17:31:27.000ZThe 2013 grades 3-8 ELA and math proficiency percentages should not be compared directly with prior-year results. Unlike prior years, proficiency is now based on the Common Core – a more demanding set of knowledge and skills necessary for 21st century college and careers. In order to comply with FERPA regulations on public reporting of education outcomes, rows with the number of students tested 5 or less are suppressed. Ethnicities with very small counts (Native American, Pacific Islanders, Multi-Racial) are not shown in Ethnicity spreadsheet, but are included in the citywide totals. Due to missing information on a small group of students, demographic categories do not always add up to citwide totals.
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NYS Math Test Results By Grade 2006-2011 - Citywide - By Race- Ethnicity
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2012-09-28T13:03:55.000ZNew York City Results on the New York State Mathematics Tests, Grades 3 - 8 Notes: As of 2006, the New York State Education Department expanded the ELA and mathematics testing programs to Grades 3-8. Previously, state tests were administered in Grades 4 and 8 and citywide tests were administered in Grades 3, 5, 6, and 7. In 2006, NYSED treated District 75 students as a distinct geographic district. For 2007-2011, District 75 students are represented in their home districts and boroughs. Spreadsheets for District and Borough do not include District 75 students in 2006. Starting in 2010, NYSED changed the scale score required to meet each of the proficiency levels, increasing the number of questions students needed to answer correctly to meet proficiency.
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LC- CC- SOE- School- Partners-20161004-pub
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2019-02-15T01:10:39.000ZLehman School of Education partnerships with local schools as reported on October 4, 2016. Each record (row) represents a school in most cases. There may be multiple schools in a given zip code. Sponsoring program (Bronx Institute, Institute for Literacy Studies, Center for School College Collaboratives, Math-UP) reported where available.
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Bronx Schools2011-2012 Progress Report
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2019-04-18T20:32:11.000ZNYC Department of Education data on school performance for educational facilities in the Bronx based on several parameters such as: GPA, college placement, career readiness, safety, and others.
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Bx School District Points
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2019-02-15T18:13:43.000Z - API
Bronx School Survey - 2011
bronx.lehman.cuny.edu | Last Updated 2012-09-27T18:59:36.000ZEvery year, all parents, all teachers, and students in grades 6 - 12 take the NYC School Survey. The survey ranks among the largest surveys of any kind ever conducted nationally. Survey results provide insight into a school's learning environment and contribute a measure of diversification that goes beyond test scores on the Progress Report. NYC School Survey results contribute 10% - 15% of a school's Progress Report grade (the exact contribution to the Progress Report is dependant on school type). Survey questions assess the community's opinions on academic expectations, communication, engagement, and safety and respect. School leaders can use survey results to better understand their own school's strengths and target areas for improvement. The NYC School Survey helps school leaders understand what key members of the school community say about the learning environment at each school. The information captured by the survey is designed to support a dialogue among all members of the school community about how to make the school a better place to learn. New York City parents, students, and teachers reached new all-time participation highs on the 2011 School Survey. 960,191 surveys were submitted.