Another Course to College explained

Another Course to College
Address:612 Metropolitan Av
Location:Hyde Park, Massachusetts
Country:United States
Type:Pilot
District:Boston Public Schools
Grades:9–12a
Head:Michele Pellam
Head Name:Head of School
Enrollment:237 (2015-16)[1]
Campus Type:Urban
Website:http://accbps.org
Ceeb:220336

Another Course to College (ACC) is a Public Pilot School located in Hyde Park, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.

History

In 1976 the Peter Faneuil School, located in Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood, changed use and housed a joint transitional studies program of the Boston Public Schools and the University of Massachusetts named Another Course To College, commonly known by the acronym ACC. The program provided two years of traditional and intensive college preparatory work covering a student's junior and senior years, designed to provide students with an option to the curriculum, instructional style and organizational structure present within the regular school program. Admission was based on GPA, IQ based entrance exam, and/or teacher recommendation. Students entered the program through their assigned (home) school's "flexible campus program" and maintained enrollment there, receiving their diploma from the home school upon graduation. ACC students received UMASS I.D. cards, and were official members of the UMASS-Boston student body.[2] Courses taken by the students at UMASS received high school and college credits.[3] After its first year, 86 of 88 seniors who applied for college admission were accepted.

After the ACC/UMASS program funding was cut the building closed and converted into apartments. In its first of many moves, ACC held classes in the basement of Hyde Park High School in Hyde Park, Boston starting in the 1989–1990 school year. The Peter Faneuil School was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 16, 1994.[4]

ACC was approved as a Boston pilot school in June, 2003. In that year, ACC added 9th grade and transitioned from being an alternative program to a four-year pilot high school. The 2004–2005 school year marked ACC's first year as a full high school enrolling students in grades 9–12.[5]

Heads of School

Locations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Another Course To College. National Center for Education Statistics. December 12, 2018.
  2. Web site: School profiles : Boston Public Schools. Internet Archive.
  3. Web site: ACC Another Course to College Boston MA. YouTube.
  4. Web site: Asset Detail. National Park Service.
  5. Web site: BPS: Another Course to College. Another Course to College. 2018-01-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20180120070349/http://accbps.org/about/overview/. 2018-01-20. dead.
  6. Web site: NEW SCHOOL LEADER APPOINTMENTS. Boston Public Schools.