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Schreiber director of guidance details college-counseling overhaul and local admissions results

Port Washington Union Free School District Curriculum Committee · March 27, 2026
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Justin Arrini, Port Washington’s new director of guidance, told the curriculum committee that Schreiber students continue to post strong college outcomes but face a more complex admissions landscape; he outlined data-driven counseling changes, new family outreach, grant-funded programs and plans to rebuild data systems.

Justin Arrini, the district—s director of guidance, told the Port Washington curriculum committee that the school—s college-counseling work has shifted from year-end application help to a multiyear, equity-focused program aimed at improving long-term student outcomes.

"We—re not just helping students complete applications anymore," Arrini said. "We—re guiding them through a multiyear program and process that includes academic planning, social-emotional support, and long-term goal setting." He framed counseling as a series of four phases—exploration, planning, application assistance and financial-aid navigation—that begin as early as ninth grade.

Why it matters: Arrini showed the committee local results and national trends to argue for earlier, more individualized advising. He said 90% of the Class of 2025 pursued postsecondary education and that, of those who went on to college, about 93.7% enrolled in four-year institutions. The presentation stressed that strong test scores and grades no longer guarantee admission because institutions use a wider set of strategies—including expanded early programs and active recruitment—to shape incoming classes.

Key data and context: Arrini said Schreiber students outperform New York averages on standardized tests and advanced coursework. He cited a higher-than-average ACT composite (about 28 versus a New York State average of 25) and…

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