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Teacher quality
Principal leadership
Parent involvement
The teachers are very caring and there for the kids....the office staff is awesome!
—Submitted by a parent
I have 4 children that have attended Mary Tsukamoto. I recently have become very unsatisfied with the lack of support by the non-established teachers. Another comlaint of mine is in regards to the 6th grade promotion ceremony this year. I have twins that are promoting and I have found out that the boys are required to wear only slacks. I refuse to purchase a pair of slacks that will not be worn more than once. I see no problem with boys wearing 'new' black jeans with a nice button up shirt.
—Submitted by a parent
This school says it is a 'uniform' school but you certainly could have fooled me. My son wears the uniform everyday. When I wait to pick him up after school I'm hard pressed to see another student in the uniform. Why does this school call itself an uniform school when it is not enforced. Why don't they drop the guise of a 'uniform school'? It's hyprocritical for the school to say one thing and do another. And, this is all the fault of the principal.
—Submitted by a parent
This school is just wonderful! my child is pleased with her teacher mrs. Mccartney.
—Submitted by a parent
I have not been impressed w/ Mary Tsukamoto since the beginning years, when I just lived in the neighborhood, and was new parent. It has just progressively declined. The last good principal left when my daughter began first grade in 2002. Every one since then has been a serious disappointment. The last great teacher, Mrs. Kelly, left in 2004 due to bad politics. Ms. Houston is young but very eager to do best by her students. She's the only hope for that school.
—Submitted by a parent
I think Tsukamoto works really hard to help students excel and feel nutured and able to express themselves. My daughter is in the first grade and I have been very pleased with both her kindergarten and first grade teachers. I have felt very informed on her progress and am confident that should any issues arise I would be notified immediately and we would work together on the best solution. I am also pleased to see the principal and vice principal remain very involved and accessible to the students.
—Submitted by Rose, a parent
3 kids, 2 girls, 1 boy all successfully made it through with high grades, daughters are on the way to college with shcolarships, son is doing great at Sheldon High. The community feeling of the school and the great parent involvement are key items to a happy school age child. All are present at this school.
—Submitted by a parent
The parent involvement could use a boost, but of those that do volunteer, they do an awesome job. I was on PTA for two and a half years, and know first hand. The academic Programs are great and the school recently got California Distinguished School designation. The teachers are dedicated, hard working and know how to have fun. There is band, art class, after school programs such as technology class. GATE is offered after school - would like to see a GATE program offered as an all day class if possible. The staff is extremely helpful in every way they can be when they are asked. I am glad that my son attends a school that is so well rounded it will prepare him for the future.
—Submitted by Meghan Nanney, a parent
Great school, very neighborhood friendly. Excellent teachers and working hard to raise test scores with excellent results. The 'black eye' as one reviewer put it is really a problem and needs to be addressed, not only at this school but throughout the district.
—Submitted by Concerned Parent, a parent
Teacher student ratio needs improvement. Programs with children needing assistance with ' Falling behind ' in some of there academic classes as per math etc. Needs to be worked on.
—Submitted by a parent
I just want to add to all of the other write in's. That it took me a 1.5 yrs to research schools when I knew that it was getting close for my son to get started. And I have to say that it was the best decision that I ever could of made, from the Principal, teacher's, staff, custodians, librarian, teacher's asst's. And of course the parent's. We have a great group of people. I will honestly be sadened next year when my son has to leave to move onto Junior High. Great job to everyone. Thank you for the years of support.
—Submitted by eugenia fellines, a parent
this is a great school,the teachers really care about the students!they always put the students first.
—Submitted by a parent
Community ratings and reviews do not represent the views of GreatSchools nor does GreatSchools check their accuracy or verify the reviewers' identities. Use your discretion when evaluating these reviews.
The Community Rating is the school’s average rating from its community members (e.g., parents, students, and school staff). The highest possible rating is five stars; the lowest is one star.
The API reflects year-over-year schools performance based on STAR test score results from spring 2012.
The state average for English Language Arts was 58% in 2012.
141 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
The state average for Math was 64% in 2012.
141 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
The state average for English Language Arts was 48% in 2012.
136 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
The state average for Math was 69% in 2012.
136 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
The state average for English Language Arts was 67% in 2012.
110 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
The state average for Math was 71% in 2012.
113 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
The state average for English Language Arts was 63% in 2012.
120 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
The state average for Math was 65% in 2012.
123 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
The state average for Science was 60% in 2012.
123 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
The state average for English Language Arts was 59% in 2012.
123 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
The state average for Math was 55% in 2012.
124 students were tested at this school in 2012.
2012
2011
2010
2009
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
| All Students | 53% |
| Females | 57% |
| Males | 49% |
| African American | 50% |
| Asian | 29% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 49% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Other Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 68% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 47% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 64% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 55% |
| English learner | 39% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 57% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 53% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 54% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 54% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | 53% |
| All Students | 54% |
| Females | 52% |
| Males | 56% |
| African American | 61% |
| Asian | 38% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 47% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Other Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 65% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 51% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 62% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 57% |
| English learner | 44% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 57% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 61% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 46% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 57% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | 59% |
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
The different student groups are identified by the California Department of Education; if there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
| All Students | 47% |
| Females | 43% |
| Males | 52% |
| African American | 47% |
| Asian | 36% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 39% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 70% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 42% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 66% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 48% |
| English learner | 9% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 59% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 27% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 59% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 49% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 61% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | 27% |
| Parent education - declined to state | 23% |
| All Students | 60% |
| Females | 55% |
| Males | 64% |
| African American | 47% |
| Asian | 53% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 56% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 85% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 56% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 72% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 60% |
| English learner | 33% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 68% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 25% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 67% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 59% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 83% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | 36% |
| Parent education - declined to state | 54% |
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
The different student groups are identified by the California Department of Education; if there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
| All Students | 73% |
| Females | 91% |
| Males | 61% |
| African American | 75% |
| Asian | 63% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 69% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 86% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 67% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 83% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 74% |
| English learner | 50% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 81% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 77% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 72% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 72% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 85% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | 47% |
| All Students | 71% |
| Females | 79% |
| Males | 67% |
| African American | 62% |
| Asian | 80% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 63% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 77% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 63% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 89% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 75% |
| English learner | 59% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 77% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 77% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 58% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 87% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 75% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | 44% |
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
The different student groups are identified by the California Department of Education; if there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
| All Students | 60% |
| Females | 63% |
| Males | 57% |
| African American | 41% |
| Asian | 55% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 50% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Samoan | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 71% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 49% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 83% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 61% |
| English learner | 18% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 69% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 50% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 56% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 68% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 61% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | n/a |
| All Students | 67% |
| Females | 66% |
| Males | 67% |
| African American | 35% |
| Asian | 70% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 68% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Samoan | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 74% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 62% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 76% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 70% |
| English learner | 43% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 72% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 58% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 60% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 82% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 65% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | 67% |
| Parent education - declined to state | n/a |
| All Students | 40% |
| Females | 34% |
| Males | 45% |
| African American | 24% |
| Asian | 40% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 32% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Samoan | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 48% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 37% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 46% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 41% |
| English learner | 22% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 44% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 33% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 40% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 46% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 39% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | 42% |
| Parent education - declined to state | n/a |
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
The different student groups are identified by the California Department of Education; if there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
| All Students | 56% |
| Females | 57% |
| Males | 55% |
| African American | 54% |
| Asian | 69% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 42% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Samoan | n/a |
| Other Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 88% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 52% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 67% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 56% |
| English learner | 0% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 64% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 47% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 53% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 60% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 63% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | 50% |
| All Students | 46% |
| Females | 41% |
| Males | 51% |
| African American | 14% |
| Asian | 66% |
| Filipino | n/a |
| Hispanic or Latino | 38% |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | n/a |
| Pacific Islander | n/a |
| Samoan | n/a |
| Other Pacific Islander | n/a |
| White (not Hispanic) | 59% |
| Economically disadvantaged | 41% |
| Non-economically disadvantaged | 61% |
| Students with disability | n/a |
| Students with no reported disability | 47% |
| English learner | 6% |
| Fluent-English proficient and English only | 53% |
| Migrant education | n/a |
| Gifted and talented | n/a |
| Parent education - not a high school graduate | 33% |
| Parent education - high school graduate | 50% |
| Parent education - some college (includes AA degree) | 39% |
| Parent education - college graduate | 68% |
| Parent education - graduate school/post graduate | n/a |
| Parent education - declined to state | 44% |
In 2011-2012 California used the California Standards Tests (CSTs) to test students in English language arts in grades 2 through 11; math in grades 2 through 7; science in grades 5, 8 and 10; and history-social science in grades 8 and 11. Middle and high school students also took subject-specific CSTs in math and science, depending on the course in which they were enrolled. The CSTs are standards-based tests, which means they measure how well students are mastering specific skills defined for each grade by the state of California. The goal is for all students to score at or above proficient on the tests.
The different student groups are identified by the California Department of Education; if there are fewer than 10 students in a particular group in a school, the state doesn't report data for that group.
See California's state standards
Source: California Department of Education
GreatSchools Ratings are based on the most recent standardized test results for schools. Use the breakdown ratings below to compare types of students at this school. Learn more »
Grade 2
Grade 3
Grade 4
Grade 5
Grade 6
All students
Female
Male
All students
African American
Asian
Hispanic or Latino
White (not Hispanic)
All students
Economically disadvantaged
Non-economically disadvantaged
Students with no reported disability
English learner
Fluent-English proficient and English only
Parent education - not a high school graduate
Parent education - high school graduate
Parent education - some college (includes AA degree)
Parent education - college graduate
Parent education - graduate school/post graduate
Parent education - declined to state
All students
| Ethnicity | This school | State average | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hispanic or Latino | 21% | 49% | ||
| White | 21% | 28% | ||
| Asian | 20% | 8% | ||
| African American | 18% | 7% | ||
| Multiple or No Response | 15% | 3% | ||
| Filipino | 3% | 3% | ||
| Pacific Islander | 2% | 1% | ||
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 0% | 1% |
| This school | District average | State average | |
|---|---|---|---|
| English language learners 1 | 21% | N/A | 24% |
| Students eligible for free or reduced-price lunch program 2 | 60% | N/A | 52% |
| Language | This school | State average | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spanish | 45% | 85% | ||
| Hmong | 13% | 1% | ||
| Vietnamese | 11% | 2% | ||
| Hindi | 7% | 0% | ||
| Punjabi | 6% | 1% | ||
| Cantonese | 5% | 2% | ||
| Filipino (Pilipino or Tagalog) | 5% | 1% | ||
| All other non-English languages | 2% | 1% | ||
| Russian | 2% | 0% | ||
| Arabic | 1% | 1% | ||
| Lao | 1% | 0% | ||
| Gujarati | 0% | 0% | ||
| Khmer (Cambodian) | 0% | 0% | ||
| Ukrainian | 0% | 0% |
| This school | District average | State average | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average class size | 20 | N/A | 25 |
| This school | District average | State average | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average years teaching in district | 11 | N/A | 11 |
| Average years teaching | 13 | N/A | 13 |
| This school | District average | State average | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full credential | 100% | N/A | 96% |
| Emergency credential or waiver | 0% | N/A | 2% |
| School Leader's name |
|
| Special schedule |
|
| Fax number |
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8737 Brittany Park Drive
Sacramento,
CA 95828
Phone: (916) 689-7580
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