@Mwfan1921 It’s also made up from the environment they live in so their Adversity Score will not be as high because they attend a school in a less adverse area but it should still reflect the environment where they live.
On the other hand, it’s a strange coincidence that the example they show in the one pdf is Central High School in Philadelphia. This HS would give the opposite effect as it’s a Special Admission HS with high achievers from throughout the city but it’s located in a very adverse part of the city. So the students get the advantage of going to the equivalent of Conestoga, Lower Merion, Radnor, etc but it’s located in the hood.