Connetquot School District | |
Motto: | Excellence in Education |
Type: | Public |
Grades: | PreK-12 |
Superintendent: | Dr. Joseph Centamore |
Asst Superintendents: | Christina Poppe, Reza Kolahifar, Robert Hauser |
Schools: | 10 |
Students: | 5,393 (2022-2023) |
Colors: | Red and white |
The Connetquot Central School District of Islip is a school district located in the Town of Islip of Suffolk County, New York on Long Island. There is one preschool, seven elementary schools, two middle schools, and one senior high school.
The district includes the entirety of the communities of Oakdale and Ronkonkoma, and almost all of Bohemia, while it also serves parts of Islandia, Sayville, and West Sayville. Most parts of Sayville and West Sayville are zoned to the neighboring Sayville School District.[1]
The total enrollment of the 2022–2023 school year among Connetquot's ten schools was 5,393 students.[2]
Data from USN states that Connetquot District's students are 51% male and 49% female. The majority of students are white, with a 69.4% majority. Furthermore, 19% of students are Hispanic, 6% are Asian, 3.2% are black, and 2% are of mixed race. The website also says that 16.6% of students are "economically disadvantaged".[3]
In 1960, with continuing suburban growth, voters in the existing Oakdale-Bohemia and Ronkonkoma school districts voted to consolidate their two districts, which paved the way for construction of a high school.[4]
In January 1962, the entire district was shuttered for a week due to an outbreak of scarlet fever.[5]
The district closed all of its schools on October 29, 2012 and the following days as a result of Hurricane Sandy.[6]
At the start of the 2018 school year, Oakdale-Bohemia Middle School faced widespread mold growth, leading to many parents' concern with their children's safety.[7]
Like most school districts in the United States, Connetquot temporarily closed its schools in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[8]
The district faced widespread protests both in and outside their schools, after it was believed by the community that they had ordered the resignation of Connetquot High School's principal in March 2023.[9] [10]
In January 2024, the Government of New York State mandated that all new school buses purchased by the district, from 2027 onward, be electric.[11]
The district was one of the beneficiaries of a government program that guarantees free school lunch for students, in February 2024.[12]
In July 2007, the school district received national attention when two teenagers who attended Connetquot High School were arrested for planning an attack on the school mirroring that of Columbine. The plans, discovered in a notebook left in a Bohemia parking lot, reportedly included a hit list of students and staff and how to ignite explosives.[13] One of the teenagers involved in the plot, Christopher Franko, was arrested again in June 2010 for planning a similar attack. The plan failed when Franko and another conspirator were denied the purchase of a shotgun, and turned over to Suffolk County Police.[14]
In May 2019, three students of Connetquot High School were arrested for discussing plans to detonate explosives at the school. The three were discussing their plans on a school bus, when another student heard them, and reported the conversation to an administrator. The administrator then reported the incident to Suffolk County Police, and the school was evacuated. The entire conversation was caught on the school bus's surveillance system. Police also found a copy of The Anarchist Cookbook, a book with bomb-making instructions, in one of the conspirators' homes. The three were taken into custody and charged with conspiracy.[15] [16]
The district filed a lawsuit against the New York State Board of Regents in October 2023, when the board tried to enforce a ban on the use of Native American folklore for school mascots. The district was ordered to remove all names, imagery and mascots relating to the thunderbird from its schools by June 2025. Connetquot schools had used the thunderbird, or "T-Bird" as it is often called in Connetquot, as their school mascot since the 1960s. When the lawsuit was filed, the district argued the ban was unconstitutional.[17]
As of August 2024, there is an ongoing lawsuit against the school district as a result of their pride flag policy.[18] The district's ban on displaying the flags in school had already caused controversy prior to the lawsuit.[19] The lawsuit was initiated in January 2024 by an openly homosexual teacher of Connetquot High School, who claimed the district's policy regarding the flags was discriminatory against LGBT students, teachers and staff. One of the defendants named in the case was Connetquot High School's Principal, Michael Moran,[20] despite it being widely believed that his resignation in March 2023 was a result of his support for displaying pride flags in the school.[21]