CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

78F Hi 78F
Lo 68F

Recent Blog Posts

Brearley Tops Survey of Private Schools

Grading the Private Schools
By ELIZABETH GREEN, Staff Reporter of the Sun | January 31, 2008

Mayor Bloomberg got the whole city talking by assigning letter grades to the public schools. Some suggested charter schools should be next, and they were. Left out, until now, have been private schools.

The New York Sun has assigned its own letter grades, using a mathematical formula that takes into account the school's net assets and the number of students it sends to Harvard and adjusts for the size of the student body.

RELATED: For Every Private School, a Superlative

At the top is an all-girls school on the Upper East Side known as one of the best schools in the city, Brearley. It was the only school to earn an "A+" grade on the Sun's survey. In the past three years, 12 Harvard freshmen hailed from Brearley — a high number for an upper school of just 207 students. The school reported more than $100 million in net assets, the third-largest number in the city, in a tax filing for 2005, the most recent year for which data from all the schools was available. That is more than double the assets of many included schools.

New York State is unusual in that 20% of students here do not attend public schools. In certain parts of the city, the rate is even higher. According to U.S. Census figures, 85% of children in a census tract near the Guggenheim Museum attend private schools.

"Almost every variety of school is represented in New York City," the executive director of the New York State Association of Independent Schools, Elizabeth Penney Riegelman, said. "There are far more options than there are in virtually any other city."

Navigating all the choices, however, can be difficult. Aside from regular evaluations required to maintain accreditations — performed by one of two independent oversight groups, Ms. Riegelman's NYSAIS and the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools — many schools shun rankings and any information-sharing that would facilitate it. They are also tight-lipped about what happens behind their doors, training even alumni not to speak to reporters.

Yet the public record offers at least one measure of how the schools are doing, and how they stack up against one another.

As nonprofit organizations, schools must file tax forms each year reporting their assets, liabilities, and net worth. As college-feeders, they also create substantial paper trails. To find out how many Harvard graduates a school produced, for instance, one need only check the university's freshman register — known on campus as the facebook — which lists nearly every class member's name and high school.

A new ranking system drawn up by The New York Sun this year, the New York Sun Private School Index, draws on these two data points, adjusting to account for each school's size.

Harvard admission is used not because it should be every student's goal but because, being so elusive, it is a good stand-in for a graduate's odds of going anywhere he or she pleases. Last year only 9% of applicants — a self-selected group to begin with — got into Harvard.

The net assets number, which includes a school's endowments and real estate, gives a sense of a school's stability and vitality.

Different schools may account for assets differently, but having a deep financial reserve can be an advantage. "If you're operating at a level where your net assets is equal to say one month of operating expenses, then you're running awfully close. It wouldn't take much to really upset the organization's finances," an accounting consultant based near Washington, D.C., Christine Manor, said. "If however your net assets are equivalent to nine months of operating expenses, then you have more of a cushion."

The author of a guide to Manhattan independent schools, Victoria Goldman, said asset and endowment figures are good indicators of a school's ability to "weather hard times."

By communicating the size of the endowment, net assets tell more complicated stories: how much donor loyalty a school has built up, the quality of a school's facilities. and how easily it can pass out financial aid.

The Sun rankings — not the only way to look at the schools, but one way to assess them — confirm some reputations and offer some surprises, too.

Three members of a top tier of schools known as the Ivy Preparatory School League are the Sun's top three.

After Brearley comes its brother school, Collegiate. An Upper West Side coeducational school that is nearing its 300th birthday, Trinity, came in third. Both schools sent many students to Harvard and had net assets above $50 million.

In a push that could add new fuel to longstanding competition among the city's top girls' schools, two Brearley rivals, Spence and Chapin, get two of the last A's at Nos. 6 and 4 respectively.

The Sun list de-emphasizes other well-regarded schools, such as the Saint Ann's school in Brooklyn Heights, which, with $24 million in net assets and only five alumni recorded in Harvard's freshman register, got a low B. The head of school at Saint Ann's, which topped a 2004 ranking by the Wall Street Journal, dismissed the Sun's ranking system. "We don't believe in grades," Lawrence Weiss said. "I conscientiously object."

Some schools that were not included in the rankings for lack of data nonetheless fared well in particular measures. A free Catholic school for boys, Regis High School, was the alma mater of 10 students listed in the Harvard registers. The school was not included in the rankings because, as a religious institution, it does not have to report its net assets.

Five schools received "D" grades in the Sun rankings, the lowest handed out. All of the "D" schools had no graduates listed in the Harvard registers. They all reported net assets below $30 million.

Cynthia Bing, the head of the school advisory service for a group that helps parents navigate local independent schools, the Parents League, said parents should not make decisions solely on letter grades or numerical rankings based on Harvard admissions or net assets. "Assessing a school is much more complex, and it should be very individualized for each student and each family on their best match," she said. "The gut is the best measurement. That's how parents should rate schools: they go visit them, or if the kids are older, they go visit."

When the city Education Department handed out grades to most of the public schools under its watch this year, many parents and principals condemned the judgments for being based almost entirely on standardized test scores. But a recent Quinnipiac poll showed most New York City parents who know the grade their children's school received, 75%, believed the grades were fair, compared to 21% who didn't.

A deputy schools chancellor, Christopher Cerf, declined to comment on whether grades are appropriate for private schools, but he defended the general concept. "As a parent, I think the more folks know about their schools, the better they're able to make sound choices," he said.

The first-ever New York Sun guide also includes superlatives for many of the schools included on the list as well as some that were not. The superlatives — ranging from best humanities program to best cafeteria — were compiled from interviews with dozens of parents, teachers, administrators, and alumni.

The list of 23 schools that received grades is based on which schools provided information on their net assets to the Internal Revenue Service in 2005 and the total number of students they serve either to a publicly available online guide, Peterson's, or directly to The New York Sun.

The director of admission at Harvard, Marlyn McGrath, called New York schools an excellent group across the board, but said none of them is the key to gaining entry to her college. "We have excellent students who have been to more modest schools, and we have more modest applicants who have been to very excellent schools," Ms. McGrath said. "We don't admit schools; we admit students."


Reader comments on this article

Read all comments

Comment By Date

Great survey! I would have included more than Harvard if the other top schools also have face books. That way... [MORE]

Anonymous 

Jan 31, 2008 07:08

While the point of this article may have been satirical, it serves to reinforce the designer-label mentality of a lot... [MORE]

Patricia Fry 

Feb 21, 2008 09:53

Interesting survey in that it takes into account each schools net assets as well as exmissions data. one can argue... [MORE]

thewiseking 

Jan 31, 2008 09:24

What study worth noting would use such a flawed system? The logic here presupposes that the other 91% of students... [MORE]

J H 

Jan 31, 2008 10:41

the methodology is absolutely flawed. to judge a school soley on how many of its students went to Harvard and... [MORE]

anonymous 

Jan 31, 2008 15:26

As a parent reviewing schools, this helps me cut through the spin perpetrated by students,alumni or parents of competing schools.... [MORE]

NYC mom 

Feb 2, 2008 23:45

Letter grades in the city began with John Dewey High School in Brooklyn in 1970. Not sure what Bloomberg has... [MORE]

JC Clark 

Jan 31, 2008 11:42

too harvard-focused. much broader circle of top-tier universities out there -- including ones with little applicant crossover w/harvard.

[MORE]

NYC Dad 

Jan 31, 2008 12:25

What about the number of kids who get into Yale? Or Stanford? Or Cal Tech? Or Swarthmore, Amherst, Williams, Haverford,... [MORE]

Justin Warner 

Jan 31, 2008 14:01

I have to say that as a New York Sun reader who's been a fan from the first issue, and... [MORE]

Adam Beckerman 

Jan 31, 2008 15:23

To say you judge it on the basis of students getting into harvard and the schools net assets makes this... [MORE]

John 

Jan 31, 2008 21:06

As a parent whose child attends one of the "A" ranked schools, I would be curious to know why some... [MORE]

Lisa Kohl 

Feb 4, 2008 10:45

Perhaps this analysis should have looked at offers of admission, not matriculations. Of students cross-admitted at H-Y and H-P, many... [MORE]

grb 

Jan 31, 2008 14:40

It's interesting to see schools reviewed, and sometimes the reviews tell us more about the values and assumptions of the... [MORE]

Peter Booth 

Jan 31, 2008 15:18

What these rankings don't take into account is the disparity in enrollment in graduating classes amongst elite schools. Some of... [MORE]

Stanislaus 

Jan 31, 2008 15:29

Dear NY Sun,
I am the President of the Guild of Independent School and I am writing to comment upon your... [MORE]

George Davison 

Jan 31, 2008 16:09

A complete waste of time. Another useless "survey." Why don't you take a survey of the kids who attend these... [MORE]

Slav a Hazin 

Jan 31, 2008 17:11

as one of the sudents that was given an extremely poor grade, i think you should have included more than... [MORE]

william stern 

Jan 31, 2008 19:54

To say that DWIGHT is on the same level as a school such as Nightingale is quite laughable. [MORE]

John 

Jan 31, 2008 21:05

This has nothing to do with the schools themselves and just to do with money. It is gross and rude... [MORE]

Sam 

Jan 31, 2008 21:20

Let me begin by saying that there is no greater fan of the Sun than me. Always staunchly on the... [MORE]

Brian Rom 

Jan 31, 2008 21:41

Most famous and successful hollywood directors go to film schools, such as USC, Columbia, NYU and Stanford, some of the... [MORE]

Max and Natalie 

Jan 31, 2008 21:59

Harvard is not even the number one school anymore, Princeton is. I know that a ton of kids from your... [MORE]

Sara 

Feb 1, 2008 23:17

The "New York Sun Private School Index" is obviously a parody. How could anyone take this alleged "ranking system" seriously? [MORE]

Anonymous 

Jan 31, 2008 23:29

The author assumes that the entire purpose of a private school education is to ensure a students admission into into... [MORE]

Scott Forsythe 

Feb 1, 2008 08:24

Comment on this article

    Before submitting your comment, please provide a valid email address to complete the verification process.

    Fall Education
    A New York Sun Advertorial Section

    NEW YORK ›

    A Surge of Support for the Sun Voiced by Leaders in the City

    19 Columbia Freshmen Jump to the Ivy League From the Armed Forces

    2 Arrested for Running Prostitution Ring

    Community Organizers 'Appalled' by Their Portrayal

    City Teacher Charged With Section 8 Fraud

    More School Construction Is Urged for Manhattan

    NATIONAL ›

    Detroit Mayor To Step Down: 'I Lied Under Oath'

    Tropical Storm Hanna Set To Soak East Coast

    Palin Speech Draws More Than 40 Million Viewers

    Abortion Rights Group Sees 'Discrepancy' in Palin Stance

    Bush To Announce Troop Levels in Iraq Next Week

    Abramoff Sentenced to Four Years in Corruption Scandal

    ARTS+ ›

    This Old House: Godfrey Cheshire's Family History

    Alan Ball Is Looking for Trouble

    Latinbeart 2008: The Heart of Latin America Is Strong

    'Mister Foe': The Boy Who Cried Mother

    'Everybody Wants To Be Italian': Love Is Never Saying ... Anything

    'August Evening': A Repressed Family in the Land of the Free