- PS 14 reported a higher chronically absent students than PS 18 (261 vs. 119).
- PS 14 reported a higher students per counselor than PS 18 (414:1 vs. 301:1).
- PS 18 reported a higher in-school suspensions than PS 14 (5 vs. 0).
- Source Data Limit: 5 metrics are directly comparable between the two schools.
Attendance
How consistently students are present
PS 14 reported a higher chronically absent students than PS 18 (261 vs. 119).
School Environment
Disciplinary actions from the Civil Rights Data Collection
PS 18 reported a higher in-school suspensions than PS 14 (5 vs. 0).
Staffing & Support
Counselor and support staff capacity
PS 14 reported a higher students per counselor than PS 18 (414:1 vs. 301:1).
Subgroup Analysis
Comparing reported values between specific student populations where both schools have data.
17 subgroup comparisons available across both schools.
Contextual Indicators
District Context
District-level data describes the overarching school district, not the individual school.
Per-pupil spending
PS 14
$29,394.56
PS 18
$29,394.56
Local revenue share
PS 14
27.9%
PS 18
27.9%
State revenue share
PS 14
57.3%
PS 18
57.3%
Federal revenue share
PS 14
14.7%
PS 18
14.7%
District chronic absenteeism rate
PS 14
46.5%
PS 18
46.5%
County Economics
Both schools are located in the same county.
Median household income
Rensselaer County
$86,663
Rensselaer County
$86,663
Poverty rate
Rensselaer County
11.8%
Rensselaer County
11.8%
Bachelor's degree or higher
Rensselaer County
37.3%
Rensselaer County
37.3%
Unemployment rate
Rensselaer County
3.4%
Rensselaer County
3.4%
This comparison is derived exclusively from publicly available federal and state datasets. It may not reflect the most current information. We encourage parents and families to supplement this data with information published directly on each school’s website, which may include more recent figures.