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N.Y.C. Lab School for Collaborative Studies

Grades: 9-12
Staff Pick Staff Pick for Special Ed

Our Insights

What’s Special

Challenging academics within a supportive environment

The Downside

Drab building

It is rare to find a high school as attuned to the peculiar charms and vulnerabilities of teen-dom as the NYC Lab School for Collaborative Studies, one of the most successful small high schools in the city. "When students are anxious, depressed, isolated or afraid, we believe they're hijacked, and so unable to be present and engage in the work at hand," said principal Brooke Jackson.

Lab is a relief in so many ways, boasting stellar college acceptances to the likes of Princeton, Yale and the University of Chicago, yet offering a safe port where teens can truly be teens. A parent calls it "a mecca for quirky, smart kids who can handle the work."

Inclusion is a centerpiece of Lab. Almost all the classes are team-taught. One member of the team is certified to teach special education and the other is an academic content area specialist. Roughly five students in each class have special needs and they are fully integrated into the class. An ASD Nest program brings in about five students each year from the borough and integrates them into classrooms as well. These children are on the autism spectrum. "The novelty is that we are at once a school that screens for academic readiness AND we mainstream/fully include students with learning disabilities, social/emotional struggles, students on the autism spectrum (ASD nest program), and students with physical and intellectual disabilities (Access program)," Jackson said.

Students are integral to the workings of the school to an unusual degree, from the student-led clubs, which range from the sporty and goofy (ping pong, comic books) to the serious-minded (HIV Action, Model United Nations). They oversee most aspects of Lab Theater Company's three annual performances. Seniors tutor younger peers in math and lead small group advisories to help freshmen adjust to the school. Alumni come back to visit and say they entered college ready to speak up, ask questions and work well with others, according to the administration.

Teens who choose Lab will make the most of it if they fully embrace "Labbie" culture. Some teachers, and the principal, choose to be called by their first names and most staff function more like coaches than lecturers, roaming the classroom and offering advice as teens work on their assigned tasks. It is common to hear the scrape of chairs and tables as students rearrange their classrooms to facilitate conversation. Teachers embrace teens in all their slouchy glory; it is part of the learning, the principal said, to learn how to use things like iPads and skateboards appropriately in school. If a child needs a break from class, she or he may take a lap around the drab building. A senior, who was unhappy in his middle school, said, "I have been loved here."

Academics are rigorous and designed to prepare all students for four-year colleges. Yet Lab plans for the fact that children mature at different rates academically, as well as socially. The school offers unusual flexibility in math; if an 8th-grader did not take Regents-level algebra in middle school, for example, it is not too late to jump on the track leading to advanced placement calculus by taking both algebra 2/trigonometry and geometry sophomore year.

All teachers have certification in their areas of expertise, and every student is required to take four years of math and four years of science. In addition to physics and AP calculus, students may choose from statistics, forensics, AP environmental science, robotics, AP computer science and AP psychology. Jackson said, "We try to find that sweet spot between anxiety and boredom."

Lab keeps in mind that girls are at risk of dropping back in math and science in middle school; the school's several female math teachers serve as role models for them. The school recently added a chapter of Girls Who Code to address potential gender disproportionality in classes, and invested in a four-year computer science sequence to expose all students to coding. 

Juniors and seniors undertake independent research projects. Juniors complete a college-style research paper and seniors do a year-long project that culminates in an oral defense before faculty.

Students in grades 9 to 11 have art and music in their programs. They may opt to include additional coursework in the visual and performing arts and may take advanced art and music classes junior and senior year.

Lab is one of three schools sharing a common building, though they seem to make it work. The teen-friendly Chelsea location is a plus; there's a pizza place right around the corner. (Lydie Raschka, web reports and interview, September 2018)

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School Stats

Citywide Average Key
This school is Better Near Worse than the citywide average

Academics

School
Citywide
How many students graduate in 4 years?
 
99%
How many students with disabilities graduate in 4 years?
 
96%
Average daily attendance
 
93%
How many students miss 18 or more days of school?
 
24%
How many parents of students with disabilities say this school offers enough activities and services for their children's needs?
 
91%
How many parents of students with disabilities say this school works to achieve the goals of their students' IEPs?
 
100%
From the 2022-23 School Quality Guide and 2022-23 NYC School Survey

Students

425
Number of students
Citywide Average is 615

Race/Ethnicity


School
Citywide
Low-income students
 
54%
Students with disabilities
 
28%
Multilingual learners
 
1%
From the 2022-23 Demographic Snapshot

Safety & Vibe

School
Citywide
How many students were suspended?
 
0%
How many students say they feel safe in the hallways, bathrooms and locker rooms?
 
86%
How many students think bullying happens most or all of the time at this school?
 
29%
How many students say that some are bullied at their school because of their gender or sexual orientation?
 
21%
How many teachers say they would recommend this school to other families?
 
94%
From the 2022-23 NYC School Survey and 2019-20 NY State Report Card

Faculty & Staff

School
Citywide
How many teachers say the principal is an effective manager?
 
94%
17.1
Years of principal experience at this school
Citywide Average is 7
134
Number of students for each guidance counselor or social worker
Citywide Average is 191
How many teachers have 3 or more years of experience teaching?
 
89%
Are teachers effective?
From the 2022-23 NYC School Survey, 2022-23 School Quality Guide, 2021-22 Report on School-Based Staff Demographics, 2023 Guidance Counselor Report, and this school's most recent Quality Review Report

Advanced Courses

Which students have access to advanced courses at this school? Learn more

Calculus

 
14%

Computer Science

 
11%

Physics

 
27%

Advanced Foreign Language

 
4%

AP/IB Arts, English, History or Social Science

 
96%

AP/IB Math or Science

 
51%

Music

 
26%
From unpublished, anonymized data from the 2021-22 school year provided by the New York State Education Department, brought to you by

College Readiness

School
Citywide
How many students graduate with test scores high enough to enroll at CUNY without remedial help?
 
96%
How many students take a college-level course or earn a professional certificate?
 
99%
How many students who have graduated from this high school stay in college for at least 3 semesters?
 
80%
From the 2020-21 and 2022-23 School Quality Guide

How many graduates who are eligible received Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) funding to attend a NYS college?
 
33%
This shows how well this school supports low-income students to get funding for college.
How many of those TAP recipients made it through college? Learn more
From unpublished, anonymized student-level data for the class of 2016-17 provided by the New York State Higher Education Services Corporation (HESC) in coordination with the National Student Clearinghouse (NSC), brought to you by
How many students filled out a FAFSA form by the end of their senior year?
 
77%
From the 2022-23 FAFSA data released by Federal Student Aid, brought to you by Visit Understanding FAFSA for help with the FAFSA and financial aid.
For more information about our data sources, see About Our Data · More DOE statistics for this school

Programs & Admissions

From the 2024 High School Directory

College Prep (M74A)

Admissions Method: Screened

Program Description:

Collaborative work and interdisciplinary projects.

N.Y.C. Lab School for Collaborative Studies ASD Nest Program (M74Y)

Admissions Method: ASD/ACES Program

Offerings

From the 2024 High School Directory

Language Courses

Spanish

Advanced Courses

Algebra II (Advanced Math), AP Calculus AB, AP Computer Science Principles, AP English Language and Composition, AP English Literature and Composition, AP Environmental Science, AP Psychology, AP Seminar, AP Spanish Language and Culture, AP United States Government and Politics, AP United States History, Chemistry (Advanced Science), Physics (Advanced Science), World Languages (Advanced World Languages)

Boys PSAL teams

Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country, Outdoor Track, Soccer

Girls PSAL teams

Basketball, Cross Country, Flag Football, Outdoor Track, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, Volleyball

Coed PSAL teams

Golf

Read about admissions, academics, and more at this school on NYCDOE’s MySchools

NYC Department of Education: MySchools

Contact & Location

Location

333 West 17 Street
Manhattan NY 10011

Trains: 1 Line to 18th St; 2 Line, 3 Line, F Line, M Line to 6th Av; A Line, C Line, E Line, L Line to 14th St

Buses: M11, M12, M14A-SBS, M14D-SBS, M20, M23-SBS, M55, M7, SIM1C, SIM33, SIM33C, SIM3C, SIM4C, SIM7, SIM9, X27, X28


Contact

Principal: Brooke Jackson

Parent Coordinator: Theresa Della Valle

Phone: 212-691-6119

Website

Other Details

Shared campus? Yes

This school shares the building with its middle school and the Museum School

Uniforms required? No
Metal detectors? No

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