Miami Gardens

Schools & Education

Top Rated Elementary & Middle Schools in Miami Gardens (2026 Guide)

School ratings only tell part of the story. Here's what the grades actually mean, which schools are worth looking at, and how to navigate enrollment in Miami-Dade.

Students in a school setting, engaged and learning

Choosing the right school in Miami Gardens means understanding a system that's more flexible than most parents realize. Photo: Unsplash

School choice in Miami-Dade is legitimately complicated. There are zoned schools, magnet schools, charter schools, and choice programs — and most parents moving to Miami Gardens don't realize that where you live doesn't always determine where your child has to go. The system has options. You just have to know they exist.

This guide covers the top-rated elementary and middle schools that serve Miami Gardens — both zoned schools within the city and magnet options that Miami Gardens families commonly apply to. School grades come from the Florida Department of Education's annual school report cards, which rate schools A through F based on standardized test performance, learning gains, and graduation rates (for high schools).

How Florida school grades work Florida's A–F grades are calculated primarily from state standardized test scores (FSA / Florida Assessment), with credit for learning gains even when scores are below average. An A school means strong overall performance. A B or C school in a historically underserved area often means strong improvement — learning gains count. Don't write off a B-rated school without looking at the growth data.

Top elementary schools serving Miami Gardens

Norland Elementary School

Miami Gardens · Zoned school · PreK–5

B

Norland Elementary consistently performs above the Miami-Dade district average on reading and math assessments, which is a meaningful bar in a large urban district. The school has a stable administration — same principal for multiple years — and parents tend to cite that consistency as one of the reasons the school culture feels settled rather than chaotic.

It's a neighborhood school in the real sense: most kids walk or ride bikes, there's genuine community engagement, and the parent-teacher relationship tends to be direct. Not perfect, but working in the right direction.

Strong literacy program Active PTA After-school programs
Grades: PreK–5 Zip: 33056 Enrollment: ~600 students

Lake Stevens Elementary School

Miami Gardens · Zoned school · PreK–5

B

Lake Stevens draws from the western 33056 area — the more suburban, quieter pocket of Miami Gardens — and that demographic tends to mean higher parent involvement and a more settled school environment. The school has improved its grade consistently over the past several years, which is the kind of trajectory that matters more than a single-year snapshot.

Parents report that the special education and ESE (Exceptional Student Education) support is above average, which is relevant for families with children who have IEPs or 504 plans and are concerned about resource availability at a neighborhood school.

Strong ESE support Consistent grade improvement Lower student-to-teacher ratio
Grades: PreK–5 Zip: 33056 Enrollment: ~550 students
Children learning together in a bright classroom

Miami-Dade's school system offers more options than many parents realize — zoned, magnet, and charter all serve Miami Gardens families. Photo: Unsplash

Top middle schools serving Miami Gardens

Norland Middle School

Miami Gardens · Zoned school · 6–8

B

Middle school transitions are hard everywhere, and Norland handles the 6–8 range better than most schools in the area. The school runs structured elective programs — band, visual arts, and a STEM track — which matters for families whose kids need an engagement hook beyond core academics to stay motivated in those sometimes-rough middle school years.

Academically it's solid rather than exceptional, with reading scores that track above district average and math scores that are more variable. The athletics program gets consistent parent praise and the school has genuinely competitive sports teams in basketball and track.

STEM elective track Competitive athletics Band and visual arts
Grades: 6–8 Zip: 33056 Enrollment: ~900 students

"The school grade is a starting point, not the whole answer. A B school where your kid has a great teacher beats an A school where they're lost in a crowd."

Magnet schools Miami Gardens families commonly apply to

Miami-Dade's magnet school system allows families to apply to schools outside their zone, which opens up options significantly for Miami Gardens residents. Applications typically open in December–January for the following school year. Acceptance is competitive for the most popular programs but many families don't apply simply because they don't know the option exists.

School Focus Grades Distance from MG
Skyway Elementary International Baccalaureate (IB) K–5 ~8 miles
Mater Academy Charter STEM / College prep K–12 Multiple MG locations
Horace Mann Middle (magnet) Law, Government & Civic Education 6–8 ~10 miles
Miami Arts Studio 6-12 Visual & Performing Arts 6–12 ~12 miles

How enrollment actually works

Zoned schools

Every Miami Gardens address is zoned to a specific elementary, middle, and high school. You can find your zoned school using the Miami-Dade County Public Schools school locator tool at dadeschools.net. Enrollment for zoned schools requires proof of address, immunization records, and birth certificate.

Magnet school applications

The Miami-Dade magnet application window typically opens in November and closes in January for the following school year. Applications are submitted through the district's Magnet/Choice portal. Some programs use lottery selection; others use academic criteria. Missing the window means waiting another full year — set a calendar reminder.

Charter schools

Charter schools in Miami-Dade operate independently within the public system and have their own enrollment processes and timelines. Several charters serve Miami Gardens families directly, including Mater Academy locations within the city. Check individual charter school websites for current enrollment windows, as they differ from district timelines.

Enrollment tip If you're moving to Miami Gardens mid-year, contact the Miami-Dade district's Student Placement office directly rather than going to the school first. They can expedite placement for incoming families and will know which schools have current capacity. The process moves faster when you start at the right place.
Sharing is caring: