Brevard Public Schools Earns Third Straight ‘A’ as 17 Schools Improve Letter Grades

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Brevard Public Schools has earned an “A” rating from the State of Florida for the third consecutive year, the district announced Wednesday, pointing to broad letter-grade gains across its campuses.

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In all, 17 schools raised their letter grade this year. Thirteen moved up a single grade, while four made the rarer leap of two full letter grades in a single year — each climbing from a C to an A.

The four schools that jumped two grades were Croton Elementary, Port Malabar Elementary, Roy Allen Elementary and Mims Elementary. The district described the turnarounds as among the strongest single-year gains in its recent history.

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“We have a high performing school district, and these results illustrate that,” Superintendent Dr. Mark Rendell said in a statement. “This is the third year of steady growth and improvement. We need to acknowledge and celebrate the efforts of our students and our classroom teachers. Their hard work led to these results.”

Grade Distribution Shifts Upward

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The number of BPS schools earning an A grew from 37 to 41, and the number earning a B rose from 20 to 26. Schools rated C dropped from 26 to 16. According to the district, 79% of its schools now hold an A or B rating.

The 13 schools that improved by one letter grade were Atlantis Elementary, Audubon Elementary, Meadowlane Intermediate Elementary (each B to A); Discovery Elementary, Harbor City Elementary, James Madison Middle, Jupiter Elementary, Lyndon B. Johnson Middle, Mila Elementary, Sabal Elementary and Saturn Elementary (each C to B); and Endeavour Elementary and Golfview Elementary Magnet (each D to C).

Where the Gains Came From

The district reported district-wide achievement increases across every tested subject for the 2025-26 school year: a 3-point gain in English Language Arts, including a 6-point jump in third-grade ELA proficiency; a 3-point gain in mathematics; and a 4-point gain in science, with matching 4-point gains in both fifth- and eighth-grade science. Biology 1 and social studies each rose 4 points.

Middle school acceleration reached 77% — which BPS said is the highest rate on record.

Over the three-year span from 2023-24 to 2025-26, the district cited a 42-point increase in its overall grade and a 15-percentage-point increase in the share of schools rated A or B, from 64% to 79%.

School Board Chair Matt Susin tied the results to sustained classroom investment.

“Three consecutive ‘A’ ratings don’t happen by accident,” Susin said. “This year’s results, especially the schools that leapt two full letter grades, show what’s possible when high expectations are matched with real investment in our classrooms. I’m confident this momentum will carry into the year ahead.”

Brevard Public Schools is one of Florida’s largest districts. The district said it remains focused on building on the results in the 2026-27 school year.

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