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Cambridgeport vs Morse

Cambridgeport and Morse are very closely rated, both scoring around 9.1 out of 10. In math proficiency, Cambridgeport leads at 62.0%.

Ratings Comparison

Metric Cambridgeport Morse
Overall Rating 9.1 / 10 9.2 / 10
Academic Score 8.3 8.0
Growth Score 9.2 9.7
Diversity Index
Free/Reduced Lunch 0.1% 0.1%
Environment Score 9.8 9.8
State Rank #42 of 1,791 #28 of 1,791
State Percentile 98th 99th

Test Scores

Subject Cambridgeport Morse
Math Proficiency 62.0% 57.0%
Math (State Avg)
ELA Proficiency 67.0% 67.0%
ELA (State Avg)

School Details

Detail Cambridgeport Morse
Type Elementary School Elementary School
Grades Pre-K – 5th Pre-K – 5th
Enrollment 285 302
Student-Teacher Ratio 10.6:1 9.2:1
Per-Pupil Spending
Free/Reduced Lunch
Chronic Absenteeism
District Cambridge Cambridge
City Cambridge Cambridge

Neighborhood

Metric Cambridge (02139) Cambridge (02139)
Median Household Income $124,648 $124,648
Median Home Value $1,066,200 $1,066,200
Median Rent $2,613 $2,613
College Educated (Bachelor's+) 77.6% 77.6%
Poverty Rate 13.2% 13.2%
Avg Commute 25 min 25 min

The data story: Cambridgeport vs Morse

Morse Elementary and Cambridgeport Elementary sit 1.2 miles apart in Cambridge, Massachusetts, yet their MySchoolScout overall ratings are nearly identical — Morse at 9.2/10 and Cambridgeport at 9.1/10. The state rank tells a sharper story: Morse ranks #28 of 1,791 Massachusetts elementary schools, while Cambridgeport ranks #42 of 1,791. Both placements are exceptional, but Morse's rank represents a meaningful edge when measured against the full state field.

The academic and growth scores split in opposite directions, making a direct comparison more instructive than the headline ratings suggest. Cambridgeport holds a 0.3-point lead in academic proficiency, scoring 8.3/10 versus Morse's 8.0/10 — a real difference in current tested performance. Morse counters with a 0.5-point advantage in growth, scoring 9.7/10 against Cambridgeport's 9.2/10. That growth gap means students at Morse are accelerating faster year-over-year relative to academic peers, even if Cambridgeport's students are scoring slightly higher on absolute proficiency benchmarks at present.

On classroom size and enrollment, both schools are small by most standards, but differences exist. Cambridgeport enrolls 285 students versus Morse's 302, a modest difference of 17 students. The more consequential figure is the student-teacher ratio: Cambridgeport at 10.6:1 versus Morse at 9.2:1. Morse's tighter ratio means meaningfully more instructional contact time per student on average, which can matter significantly for children who benefit from individualized attention or differentiated instruction.

Both schools serve identical grade spans — prekindergarten through fifth grade — so neither offers a structural advantage for families with mixed-age children staying in one building across the elementary years. The divergence between Cambridgeport's stronger academic score and Morse's stronger growth score and state rank reflects genuinely different instructional profiles, not noise in the data. Families considering either school are choosing between two high-performing Cambridge elementaries that differ most meaningfully in growth trajectory and adult-to-student attention.

Editorial summary generated April 2026 · sonnet

Who each school fits

Cambridgeport

Cambridgeport is the better fit for families whose child is entering mid-elementary and where current academic proficiency benchmarks matter most — such as students with IEPs or advanced learners whose placement decisions hinge on grade-level performance data. Its 8.3/10 academic score leads Morse by 0.3 points, and its #42 state rank still places it in the top 2.5% of Massachusetts elementary schools.

Morse

Morse suits families enrolling at the prekindergarten or kindergarten level, where a 9.7/10 growth score and the tightest student-teacher ratio of the two — 9.2:1 versus Cambridgeport's 10.6:1 — are more predictive of long-term outcomes than current proficiency snapshots. Its #28 state rank also gives it a measurable edge for families prioritizing overall school standing.

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