Beta You're viewing our redesigned school page. Prefer the classic layout?

Northview High School

Public Grades 9-12
487th
SchoolDigger Rank ?
of 838 Florida High Schools
Better than 42% of Florida high schools
Summary

Northview High School in Century, FL, is a small rural school serving 527 students in grades 9-12 within the Escambia County School District, a district ranked in the bottom half of Florida.

Northview presents a mix of challenges and surprising strengths. Its biggest academic hurdles are in math and English, where proficiency rates lag significantly behind nearby Jay High School in the higher-performing Santa Rosa district. For example, only 30% of Northview students are proficient in Algebra 1 compared to 52% at Jay, and the gap in 10th-grade English is even wider (48% vs. 71%). The school also struggles with chronic absenteeism, which at 36% is well above the state average and significantly higher than Jay’s 24%. However, Northview excels in other areas. It boasts a remarkable 95.4% graduation rate, outperforming both its district and the state. Furthermore, the school matches or exceeds state averages in Biology and US History, even outperforming Jay in those subjects. This suggests strong teaching in specific areas and a dedicated staff focused on helping students graduate.

For parents, the key takeaway is that Northview is a school of contrasts. It successfully retains and graduates its students, but many leave without strong proficiency in foundational math and reading skills. The recent jump in Algebra 1 scores (from 6% to 30%) hints at possible improvement, but the high absenteeism rate remains a critical issue that directly impacts learning. While the school’s per-student spending is slightly lower than Jay’s, the performance gap is more likely tied to district-level challenges and attendance patterns than to funding alone.

527
Students ?
17.5
Student/teacher ratio ?
$12,869
Per pupil spending ?
34.5%
Free/discounted lunch ?
 4100 W Highway 4
       Century, FL  32535

(850) 761-6000

District: Escambia


Feeder schools for Northview High School:

Elementary:    Bratt Elementary School
    Molino Park Elementary
Middle:    Ernest Ward Middle School
Racial breakdown:

White:
72.9%
African American:
14.8%
Hispanic:
5.9%
more
 See top rated Florida high schools

 Compare Northview High School to nearby high schools!
At a glance
Ranking trend: Holding steady — 44th percentile in 2016 → 42nd in 2026
Strengths
95% graduate in 4 years — above the Florida average (92%)
Worth a look
!Test scores below the Florida average (55% vs 64% meeting standards)
!Algebra 1 scores 33 pts below the Florida average
Students meeting standards (2025-2026) ?
This school55%
District avg59%
Florida avg64%
487th of 838
Florida public high schools ?
Bottom 42%▼ down 2 pts since 2016
See the entire ranking list of Florida High Schools →
SchoolDigger rating ?
5th of 10High Schools in the Escambia
51st of 70Escambia among Florida districts
Statewide rank percentile over time (100 = the top-ranked school in the state; click a legend item to add a student group)
Show full rank history (all student groups)

All Students

YearAvg scoreStatewide rankFlorida percentileRating
202638.7487 of 83841.9%★★☆☆☆
202536.2509 of 84439.7%★★☆☆☆
202431.1528 of 80734.6%★★☆☆☆
202332.1479 of 79239.5%★★☆☆☆
202232.9470 of 77439.3%★★☆☆☆
202127.9485 of 74635.0%★★☆☆☆
201933.2458 of 73437.6%★★☆☆☆
201840.4373 of 71647.9%★★☆☆☆
201744.7330 of 71453.8%★★★☆☆
201638.8387 of 69344.2%★★☆☆☆
201447.7343 of 68750.1%★★★☆☆
201361.9184 of 64871.6%★★★★☆
201256.0186 of 60669.3%★★★☆☆
201163.0232 of 62262.7%★★★☆☆
201061.0257 of 62058.5%★★★☆☆
200961.3236 of 58759.8%★★★☆☆
200865.3195 of 57766.2%★★★☆☆
200754.3264 of 56353.1%★★★☆☆
200640.2315 of 47734.0%★★☆☆☆
200552.5246 of 48749.5%★★☆☆☆
200450.8265 of 48445.2%★★☆☆☆
By subject vs Florida (2025-2026) ?
US History75%~ state avg
Biology 174%~ state avg
English Language Arts49%-12 vs state
Geometry45%-11 vs state
Algebra 130%-33 vs state

3.0
1 rating · 1 written review
50
40
31
20
10
Rate Northview High School
Have first-hand experience? A quick rating - and a sentence or two about what stands out (teachers, academics, safety, communication) - helps other families know what to expect.
Takes about a minute. We email you a link to verify your review - your address is never shown publicly.
Tap a star to rate
What people are saying
by a citizen
Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Open Quote Northview High School of Bratt, FL simple goal is to maintain the status quo. This applies to curriculum offerings, pedagogy (teaching methods), student behavior management, clubs, athletics, and the overall culture of the school. While innovation is not necessarily prohibited, proposed changes are generally frowned upon and scrutinized by the school in order to not break traditional, conservative societal norms promoted by administration and the community as a whole. NHS is looked upon as an afterthought by the Escambia School District and is not positioned geographically or by its status quo rural school reputation to be included into partnerships with the Greater Pensacola professional and post-secondary education communities. This leaves NHS in a position of having limited connections and philanthropic partnering.

NHS faces headwinds to improved test scoring primarily due to low income/ generational poverty across some of its attendance zone. Broad background knowledge is lacking due to limited numbers of college graduates and income among parents. Lessons requiring higher level thinking or assumed common knowledge run straight into these headwinds among the students, lowering school scores in core tested subjects. Reading skills can be years behind.

Many faculty are graduates of NHS, leading to a deficiency of depth of varied experiences. Students are given a more restrictive view of the world by being presented lessons focused through the lenses of local politics, religion, and career potential. Military career pathways are presented by administration as nearly the only hope for students to achieve above and beyond. Because NHS is so distantly removed from other high schools in the Escambia County School District (next nearest high school is Tate HS about 30 miles south) and from the District itself, NHS receives limited District attention for needed instructional resources. The school's small enrollment (relative to other high schools) often leaves it underfunded or underserviced for special needs students (504, IEP/ESE). Honors student programs are limited, and advanced placement courses (AP) are absent or nearly absent in most years. Students with higher aspirations often transfer to West Florida Tech or Tate, or enroll in early college placement programs. In turn, NHS is left with more average performing students, thus its state testing scores are lowered to and remain at status quo year over year. Faculty morale is often low due to underperformance of students and lack of community support relating to academics and broad academic achievement goals. Library resources are limited, not taken seriously by students. Clubs are limited, primarily because the population and attendance zone is so widespread and because the school is located far to the north edge of the attendance zone, opposite of commuter travel towards Pensacola. This make participation after school and on weekends more challenging. Most students in clubs are members of FFA or NJROTC. There are few bonafide after-school club meetings held, limiting student extracurricular engagement. Athletics are overemphasized at the school, especially football, volleyball, and softball/baseball, and cheerleading, with basketball a distant fifth place. Athletic "call outs" occur often among student athletes because away games are at great distance from the school due to its remote location. This creates a challenge for teachers and athletes to keep up with missed class time and assessments. Call outs can occur as early as 12:30 PM.

NHS's location places it in the "Bible Belt", and it is strongly reflected among many administrators, faculty, and students. For the minority not a part of the Christian religion, attending or working at NHS can be challenging. Teachers will frown upon students who are openly non-religious, LGBT, or seek pathways of ethical living that does not go along with the local religious mores. Administration and the District do little, if anything, concerning employees who openly display Christianity by the presence of Bibles on desks or posters displayed in rooms. This is also true of political issues. The school will quietly marginalize students or faculty who are not politically conservative, as well as become verbally abusive, especially towards other faculty.

The school has potential for improvement in student academics by engaging them with the Pensacola business and research community, as well as the U of West Florida. Sports programs need to be more diversified and relevant to the current generation and girls. Clubs need to be given time to function as clubs. Admin and faculty need to be respectful of differences among their own and toward students. The District needs to consistently provide ALL available resources and services that are offered to all other schools in south Escambia, and not allow distance to curtail services. Close Quote





Schools Near Northview High School









Frequently Asked Questions about Northview High School

Students at Northview High School are 73% White, 15% African American, 6% Hispanic, 5% Two or more races, 2% American Indian.

Northview High School is fed by the following schools:

Elementary : Bratt Elementary School
Elementary : Molino Park Elementary
Middle : Ernest Ward Middle School

Northview High School ranks 487th of 838 Florida high schools. SchoolDigger rates this school 2 stars out of 5.

In the 2024-25 school year, 527 students attended Northview High School.


Rate Northview High School!



Sign up for updates!

Be the first to know when there is an update for Northview High School!




SchoolDigger data sources: National Center for Education Statistics, U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Census Bureau and the Florida Department of Education.

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMERS: Not all boundaries are included. We make every effort to ensure that boundaries are up-to-date. But it's important to note that these are approximations and are for general informational purposes only. To verify legal descriptions of boundaries or school locations, contact your local tax assessor's office and/or school district.





Diagnostics