Yonkers Public Schools Explained
Yonkers Public Schools |
Motto: | Innovation • Inspiration • Excellence for All |
Country: | USA |
Location: | 1 Larkin Center, Yonkers (Westchester County) New York USA |
Coordinates: | 40.935°N -73.9006°W |
Superintendent: | Anibal Soler Jr |
Asst Superintendent: | RoseAnne Collins-Judon, Lissette M. Colón-Collins, Luis Rodriguez, Erik Wright |
Schools: | 40 |
Budget: | $641,247,726 (2020 - 2021 school year) [1] |
Us Nces District Id: | . |
Students: | 25,128 [2] |
Teachers: | 1,404 [3] |
Ratio: | 17.74 |
Yonkers Public Schools is a school district that serves all of Yonkers, New York, United States. It is governed by a mayorally appointed Board of Trustees.
Organization
The school district is organized and governed according to New York State Education Law. The Board of Education is the governing body of the school district. It consists of nine unpaid trustees, appointed by the mayor for five year terms. The trustees submit a budget to the city government, but have no taxing authority of their own. The Superintendent of Schools serves "subject to the pleasure of the Board of Education" for up to five years (contract can be extended). As the chief executive of the school district, they supervise and direct all other employees, makes decisions regarding curriculum and examination, and has a non-voting seat on the Board.
The current superintendent is Edwin M. Quezada, named interim after the sudden resignation of Michael V. Yazurlo in November 2015. In March 2015, Quezada was appointed as the new superintendent of schools at a Board of Education meeting.
Current board members include Steve Lopez, president; Rosalba Corrado Del Vecchio, vice-president; Gail Burns; Kevin Cacace; John Castanaro; Sheila Greenwald; Amjed I. Kuri, Rosemarie P. Linton, and Lawrence R. Sykes.[4]
Schools
All schools are located in the city of Yonkers.
Every school also has its own special magnet.
Middle/High Schools (Grades 7-12)
Elementary/Middle Schools (Grades PK-6/PK-8)
- Casimir Pulaski School (PK-8)
- Cesar E. Chavez School (PK-8; formerly known as Cedar Place School until 2018–19 school year) [5]
- Cross Hill Academy (3-8)
- Enrico Fermi School (PK-8)
- Eugenio María de Hostos MicroSociety School (PK-8)
- Family School 32 (PK-8)
- Kahlil Gibran School (PK-8)
- Martin Luther King Jr. Academy (PK-8)
- Montessori School 27 (PK-6)
- Montessori School 31 (PK-6)
- Museum School 25 (PK-5)
- Paideia School 15 (PK-8)
- Paideia School 24 (PK-6)
- Patricia A. Dichiaro School (PK-8)
- PEARLS Hawthorne School (PK-8)
- Robert C. Dodson School (PK-8)
- Rosemarie Ann Siragusa School (PK-6)
- Ella Fitzgerald Academy (PK-8)
- Las Hermanas Mirabal Community School (PK-8)
- School 16 (PK-8)
- School 17 (PK-5)
- School 21 (PK-6)
- School 22 (PK-6)
- School 23 (PK-8)
- School 30 (PK-8)
- School 5 (PK-8)
- School 9 (PK-6)
- Thomas Cornell Academy (PK-6)
- Westchester Hills School 29 (PK-8)
- William Boyce Thompson School (PK-8)
Early Childhood Schools (PK-2)
- Yonkers Early Childhood Academy (located in same building as Cross Hill Academy)
Adult Education (postsecondary)
- VIVE School, home of Yonkers Pathways to Success
Former/Renamed Schools
- Public School # 1 was on Dunbar St off Saw Mill River Road. Demolished (year unknown).
- Public School # 2 (built 1886) became Benjamin Franklin Jr. High School on Waverly Street. After being closed for years it was remodeled and became an apartment building.
- Public School # 3 on 15 Hamilton Avenue (Now apartment building)
- Public School # 4 on Trenchard Street (Now affordable housing)
- Public School # 6 on 33 Ashburton Ave, now apartment buildings known as "Schoolhouse Terrace"
- Public School # 7 on 380 Walnut St (Campus is now used by the Andulusia School, a private Muslim school)
- Public School # 8 on 373 Bronxville Rd is now Patricia A. DiChiaro Elementary School.
- Public School # 10 (aka: Early Childhood Center) on 75 Riverdale Ave became Hudson River Academy. It is now VIVE School/Yonkers Pathway to Success.
- Public School # 11 on 99 Wakefield Avenue (Now Montessori School)
- Public School # 12 on 164 Ashburton Ave (Now Yonkers Community Action Program)
- Public School # 13 (160 McLean Avenue) was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. The building is now an apartment building.
- Public School # 13 (195 McLean Avenue) replaced the former school site of 160 McLean Avenue. As of the 2022-23 Academic Year was renamed to Las Hermanas Mirabal Community School.
- Public School # 14 on 60 Crescent Place is now Rosemarie Ann Siragusa School
- Public School # 15 on 175 Westchester Ave is now the Paideaia School #15.
- Public School # 18 on 77 Park Hill Ave was now Scholastic Academy for Academic Excellence, and as of the 2022-23 Academic Year was renamed the Ella Fitzgerald Academy.
- Public School # 19 on 75 Morris St is now Eugenio Maria de Hostos MicroSociety School.
- Public School # 24 on 50 Colin Street is now the Paideaia School # 24
- Public School # 25 on 579 Warburton Ave, is now the Museum School 25.
- Public School # 26 on 150 Kings Cross is now Casimir Pulaski School.
- Public School # 27 on 132 Valentine Lane is now Montessori School # 27.
- Public School # 28 on 18 Rosedale Rd is now Kahlil Gibran School.
- Public School # 29 on 47 Croydon Rd is now Westchester Hills School.
- Public School # 31 on 7 Ravenswood Rd is now Montessori School # 31.
- Public School # 32 on 1 Montclair Place is now Family School # 32.
- Public School # 33 on 135 Locust Hill Ave is now Martin Luther King Jr. School.
- Emerson Junior High School on 160 Bolmer Ave became Emerson Middle School and is now Cross Hill Academy and Yonkers Early Childhood Academy.
- John Burroughs Junior High School on Palmer Rd is now Saunders Trades and Technical High School
- Nathaniel Hawthorne High School on 350 Hawthorne Ave became Nathaniel Hawthorne Jr. High School is now PEARLS Hawthorne School
- Museum Junior High School on 565 Warburton Ave became Museum Middle School and is now Riverside High School
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Jr. High School on 190 N Broadway/201 Palisade Ave became Yonkers High School of Commerce in 1938. It then became Commerce Middle School in 2000, Palisade Preparatory School in September 2008, and the Barack Obama School for Social Justice in September 2022.
- Mark Twain Middle School and Montessori School 11 on 99 Wakefield Ave/160 Woodlawn Ave combined into one school and is now Yonkers Montessori Academy.
- Walt Whitman Jr. High School on Shore View Drive/105 Avondale Rd is now the Robert C. Dodson School.
- Yonkers High School on South Broadway. Demolished (Year Unknown)
- Yonkers High School on 150 Rockland Ave became John Burroughs Middle School and is now Yonkers Middle High School
- Longfellow Jr. High School (previously known as P.S. 20 until 1938, when it moved from its previous location on 190 N Broadway) on 23 Mulberry St (will become a 40-unit apartment building)
- Yonkers High School previously known as Benjamin Franklin Jr. High School, on Poplar St. became Enrico Fermi Middle School which is now Enrico Fermi School. The first Yonkers High School was originally on South Broadway and Nepperhan Avenue, across the street from City Hall.
- Saunders Trade and Technical High School on South Broadway (school relocated to Palmer Road [in former John Burroughs Junior High School and the Old Board of Education Headquarters] and old building is now Yonkers Police Headquarters on S. Broadway)
- Elizabeth Seton College on 1061 N. Broadway became Foxfire School and is now William Boyce Thompson School.
See also
- Anibal Soler Jr - Former superintendent
External links
Notes and References
- https://www.yonkerspublicschools.org/cms/lib/NY01814060/Centricity/Domain/72/2020-21-Adopted-Budget.pdf Adopted Budget (2020 - 2021). Retrieved 2021-1-24
- https://data.nysed.gov/profile.php?instid=800000034777 Enrollment Data. Retrieved 2021-01-24
- https://data.nysed.gov/evaluation.php?year=2016&instid=800000034777&report=appr District Report Card. Retrieved 2021-01-24
- Web site: Meet the Trustees . 2022-08-22.
- Web site: Yonkers may rename school for labor leader Cesar Chavez . Journal News LoHud.com . 2021-01-24.