City officials released this year’s school progress reports, grading Sheepshead Bay High School a C, down from a B last year. The decrease partially reflects a rise in the raw score necessary to receive an A or a B. Only 75 percent of high schools received an A or a B, down from 83 percent in 2008.

Progress reports for high schools are determined by evaluating schools’ credit accumulation rates, graduation rates, and the percentage of students who pass the Regents exams.

Earlier this month, state officials suggested Sheepshead Bay High School for inclusion on a list of about a dozen city schools targeted for charter takeover, and the decreased grade may add more fuel to the fire. The state plan follows the lead of Mayor Bloomberg and School Chancellor Joel Klein of dismantling large, low-performing schools and turning them into small, privately run charter schools sharing facilities.

So far, the principal of Sheepshead Bay High School has stated that the school won’t go charter, but it’s unclear how much influence she’ll have on the decision-making.

Though state Board of Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch has said that all of the schools targeted will be clear underperformers – “It’s not going to be a controversial list” – a broader view of the grades raises doubt about whether or not Sheepshead Bay High School is a deserving candidate. For its part, Sheepshead Bay High School is not the worst performer in the area. That distinction belongs to John Dewey High School, which repeated last year’s grade of a C with a raw score of 44.2, more than four points below SBHS’s 46.5. William E. Grady High School’s scores were almost identical to SBHS, also dropping from a B to a C with a raw score of 46.6. Additionally, under last year’s grading standards, all of these schools would have received Bs.

The only area high school that improved grades this year was Abraham Lincoln High School, which increased from C to B. James Madison High School held steady at a B, while Leon M. Goldstein High School continued to take top honors as the areas best school. It consistently receives As. The citywide average raw score this year jumped to 66.7, up from 55.4.

You can see the full report below:

HS Progress Reports (Real)

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View Comments to “Sheepshead Bay HS Gets a “C”, May Turn Charter”

  1. BrooklynQon 17 Nov 2009 at 1:43 pm

    You didn’t mention the Rachel Carson High School for Coastal Studies (West Avenue) which received a B and was unrated last year.

  2. Ray Johnsonon 17 Nov 2009 at 2:35 pm

    Wow. This is unbelievable that there is a local school dedicated to coastal studies. BrooklynQ, you might do a service to the local community by putting together some useful information that could help us learn more about this school. How did you come to hear about it?

  3. Lisanne!on 17 Nov 2009 at 3:00 pm

    In other words, our Mayor is dismantling the public school system. As more public schools go the charter route those who will use public schools will be squeezed into the remaining ones. These schools will have lower performance because their resources will be strained. Voila! Another round of closings.

    What happens when they run out of schools to close?

    Some of the poorer performing schools were extraordinary years ago. So how does this decline happen?

  4. neighboron 17 Nov 2009 at 4:10 pm

    My son is a Junior at Rachel Carson HS. It is located on West Avenue and occupies the upper levels of a Middle School. He is very happy at the school which is a smaller venue which seems to be what NYC is trying to establish instead of the huge high schools like Sheepshead. I don’t think that Rachel Carson is a zoned HS, he had to apply and be accepted but I’m really not sure. My older son attended Sheepshead and seemed to get lost in the shuffle although he did have many caring and helpful teachers. He graduated a year early with a Regents Diploma, however I’m not sure how much he actually learned or how much he was coached. He is now a Lance Corporal in the Marines and stationed in Camp Pendleton, California waiting to be deployed to Afghanistan in January.

  5. Arthur Bon 17 Nov 2009 at 8:16 pm

    I went to Sheepshead Bay HS. I graduated in 2001. It was a shit hole then. It’s a shit hole now.

    If a Charter can do better, then mazeltov.

  6. [...] 2010 – 2014 Capital Plan that will place 5,123 new elementary and middle school seats to eventually sell to charter operators school districts across the city. DOE officials are asking for public input before going ahead with [...]

  7. Allan Randallon 14 Dec 2009 at 4:05 pm

    Hello, I’m a student at Junior High School from Cunningham. I understand that your school is being listed for a charter school. What will happen to my zoned school because my zoned school is your school? What will happen?

  8. [...] first wrote in November that administrators were considering Sheepshead Bay H.S. (3000 Avenue X) for closure, but at the time the principal denied the claims. Since then, the school’s list of [...]

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