Middle School for the Performing Visual Arts Houston Isd Principal

This is a listing of schools operated by the Houston Independent Schoolhouse Commune.

In the district, grades kindergarten through 5 are considered to exist elementary schoolhouse, grades 6 through 8 are considered to be centre school, and grades 9 through 12 are considered to be senior high schoolhouse. Some unproblematic schools go up to the sixth class.

Every house in HISD is assigned to an elementary school, a eye schoolhouse, and a loftier school. HISD has many alternative programs and transfer options available to students who desire a specialized educational activity and/or dislike their dwelling schools.

Current schools [edit]

EE-12 schools [edit]

  • Thomas Horace Rogers Schoolhouse (Alternative school) is office Vanguard school (K-8), part schoolhouse for the deaf (Thousand-eight), and function schoolhouse for multiply impaired children (K-12).

EE-viii schools [edit]

Traditional:

  • Gregory Lincoln Education Heart (Zoned school) (Houston)

Alternative:

  • Briarmeadow Charter School (HISD charter school) (Houston)
    • Named afterward the Briarmeadow customs,[ane] it was created in 1997, with 125 students,[ii] to relieve Piney Point and iii other elementary schools.[3] Briarmeadow Lease at in one case rented space at the Mail service Oak YMCA,[2] with students using an area library and the cafeteria of T.H. Rogers School.[three]
    • It moved into a permanent 11-acre (4.5 ha) facility, with the schoolhouse building existence xc,000-square-pes (8,400 thou2) former manufacturing warehouse, with room for 550 pupils, in 2001; the edifice had a value of $10 million,[3] funded past the Rebuild 2002 bond,[one] and its second floor had vii,000 square feet (650 m2) of infinite.[2] The classrooms are in groups with a common area linking them. The building's facilities include a cafeteria equipped with a stage and designated for multiple purposes,[three] a fine fine art studio with a separate entry area[2] and an attached music studio[iii] with high-acoustic capabilities, ii computer laboratories, a library, a multimedia room, a music studio, two language laboratories, and a science laboratory.[ii] Athletic fields, a nature surface area, and playgrounds utilize an outdoor area with eleven acres (4.5 ha) of space.[3] HISD had plans to use the second flooring every bit authoritative offices. It had 220 students in June 2001,[ii] increasing to 350 by September of that yr.[3]

PK-8 schools [edit]

  • Baker Montessori School (formerly Woodrow Wilson Montessori School, PK3 through 6 zoned, PK3-8 Montessori and fine arts magnet) (Houston)
    • Serves sections of Neartown, including parts of Montrose[4]
  • Garden Oaks G-8 School (Houston) (Zoned for Thou-5, magnet for K-eight)
    • Serves most of Garden Oaks and a section of Oak Forest[five]
  • Thomas J. Pilgrim Academy (Zoned schoolhouse) (Houston)
    • The schoolhouse was built in 1957, on the sesquicentennial of the nativity of Thomas J. Pilgrim, and opened as Thomas J. Pilgrim Elementary School.[half-dozen] In 2006 it began adding eye schoolhouse grades,[7] and in 2007 it changed its proper name to its current one and moved into its electric current location.[6] Master Alma Salman arranged to accept middle schoolhouse grades added so the school could have more than time to increase pupil performance so information technology meets their form levels. As of 2011 85% of the students at Pilgrim are low income, and about 66% of students who are new to Pilgrim accept limited proficiency of English, with Spanish and Arabic being the nigh common native languages. As of 2011 250 students are in grades vi–viii. In 2011 Children at Take chances ranked the Pilgrim middle schoolhouse equally the best comprehensive eye school program in Houston.[7]
  • The Rusk School (Houston) (magnet for Thou-8, will go vi-viii simply)
    • Rusk is in the 2d Ward,[8] at Garrow and Paige Streets, near Settegast Park.[9]
    • Rusk, named later Thomas Jefferson Rusk, was built in 1902.[1] When Clayton Homes initially opened in 1952, Rusk served as its neighborhood elementary schoolhouse. The old Rusk was demolished so U.S. Route 59 (Eastex Expressway) could exist built, and Clayton Homes students were rezoned to Anson Jones Elementary. Even so HISD perceived Anson Jones's proximity to US59 to be a run a risk, and Clayton Homes residents had difficulties with their commute due to traffic issues. HISD built a new Rusk Elementary, opening in 1960, at its current location.[9] Clayton Homes was rezoned to that school, and the new Rusk also relieved Lubbock Elementary School.[10]
    • In a menstruum before 1996 Rusk added heart school grades. Main Felipa Young spearheaded the initiative because she noticed graduates of Rusk encountering academic or disciplinary trouble in big comprehensive middle schools.[eleven] Beginning in the 2016–2017 school twelvemonth the elementary zoned grades at Rusk volition be phased out. The portions of the 2nd Ward were be rezoned to Burnet Elementary Schoolhouse and Lantrip Unproblematic School. PreKindergarten through grade 2 at Rusk will exist phased out immediately, with 3-v beingness phased out in the post-obit v years; elementary grades for Rusk were phased out by fall 2019.[12] [13]
  • Wharton Dual Linguistic communication Academy (Houston, elementary zoned, Yard-viii magnet)
    • Serves sections of Neartown, including parts of Montrose[14]

Carter G. Woodson K-8 Center in Houston formerly had PK-8; since 2018 is at present has PK-five.[xv] Eye school students were rezoned to Albert Thomas Center.[16] Ericka Mellon of the Houston Chronicle stated in 2015 that Woodson K-8 "performs well beneath the district average" although nigh Texas accountability test scores for the school increased during the flow 2013-2014.[17] In 2015 Children at Gamble ranked Woodson M-viii an "F".[17]

K-viii schools [edit]

(Zoned)

  • Billy Thousand. Reagan K-8 Educational Middle (opening in the 2010s)[xviii]

(Culling)

  • The Rice School (La Escuela Rice in Spanish, Houston)

Secondary schools [edit]

6-12 schools [edit]

  • Harper Alternative School (Houston) (Alternative schoolhouse)
  • Jane Long University (Houston) - Has a heart schoolhouse with an omnipresence purlieus, and an culling high schoolhouse
  • Sharpstown International School (Houston) (magnet school)

7-12 schools [edit]

  • Leader's University Loftier School for Concern and Academic Success (Houston) (opened in 2009)[nineteen]
Loftier schools [edit]

All high schools are in the city of Houston unless otherwise noted.

  • Bellaire High School (Cardinals), in the urban center of Bellaire
  • César Due east. Chávez Loftier School
  • Heights High School (2016-nowadays)
  • John H. Reagan High Schoolhouse (1926-2016)
  • Sam Houston Math, Science, & Engineering Center
  • Mirabeau B. Lamar Loftier School
  • Westbury Loftier School
  • Westside High Schoolhouse
  • Stephen F. Austin High Schoolhouse
  • James Madison High Schoolhouse
  • Charles H. Milby High School
  • Carnegie Vanguard High School
  • Northside High Schoolhouse (2016-nowadays)
  • Jefferson Davis High School[ disambiguation needed ] (1926-2016)
  • North Woods High School[20]
  • Ross Shaw Sterling Loftier School
  • Stephen P. Waltrip High School
  • Jack Yates Loftier School
  • Ebbert 50. Furr High School
  • Kashmere High School
  • Sharpstown High School
  • Booker T. Washington Loftier School
  • Phillis Wheatley High School
  • Margaret Long Wisdom Loftier School (2016-nowadays)
  • Robert E. Lee High School (1962-2016)
  • Evan E. Worthing Loftier School
  • Scarborough High School
Other high schools [edit]

All schools are in the city of Houston unless otherwise noted.

UIL ranking

  • Accelerated Learning And Transition Academy (ALTA)
  • Challenge Early College High Schoolhouse
  • Michael E. DeBakey Loftier School for Health Professions
    • National Blue Ribbon Schoolhouse honour winner in 1997-98[21]
    • National Bluish Ribbon School award winner in 2003[22]
  • E Early College High School
  • Eastwood Academy[23]
  • Empowerment College Preparatory High School
  • Free energy Institute Loftier School
  • HCC Life Skills Program
  • Houston Night High Schoolhouse
  • Houston University for International Studies[24]
  • Barbara Jordan Loftier School
  • High Schoolhouse for Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice
  • Liberty High School (formerly Newcomer Charter High School)
  • Center College High School-Felix Fraga
  • Eye Higher High Schoolhouse-Gulfton
  • North Houston Early on College High School[25]
  • Loftier School for the Performing and Visual Arts (HSPVA)
    • 2005 National Blueish Ribbon School[22]
  • Southward Early College Loftier School
Middle Schools [edit]
  • Crispus Attucks Centre School (Houston)
    • Serves Sunnyside and sections of South Park[26]
    • Circa 2019 over 40% of the teachers in each schoolhouse year are non nowadays in the post-obit school yr.[27]
  • Frank Black Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves sections of Oak Forest and Garden Oaks[28]
  • Luther Burbank Middle School (Houston)
    • Burbank High School opened in 1927. The schoolhouse was converted into a inferior high school and received a new building in 1949. Burbank received a Vanguard magnet schoolhouse program in 1979; it had been moved from Terrell Junior High. In the 1980s the class configuration inverse from grades 7–9 to vi–8, and the name was changed to Burbank Center Schoolhouse.[29]
    • In 1996 most of the students were from recent immigrants, and 87% of the students were Hispanic. The large number of immigrant students prompted the school to start special classes for bilingual students. By then the school held parent-teacher meetings in Spanish equally well as English language. Previously the school only had a summary of each meeting in Castilian, merely every bit a result participation from Hispanophone parents was low.[30]
  • Ruby Sue Clifton Middle Schoolhouse (Houston)
    • Serves sections of Oak Wood[31]
  • Ezekiel W. Cullen Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves the 3rd Ward[32]
  • James S. Deady Center School (Houston)
    • Serves sections of the East Terminate[33]
    • Deady's pupil torso became a majority of racial and ethnic minorities in the early 1980s.[34]
  • Thomas A. Edison Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves Magnolia Park and other areas in the Due east End[28]
  • Lamar Fleming Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves a section of the Fifth Ward[35]
  • Walter W. Fondren Heart School (Houston)
    • Serves sections of Fondren Southwest, Maplewood South–N, a part of Maplewood, and a small function of Meyerland[36] In 2015 Children at Risk ranked this school as "F".[17]
  • Richard H. Fonville Middle Schoolhouse] (Houston)
  • Forest Brook Eye School (Houston)
    • The edifice opened in 1972 as Forest Brook High School.[37] The purpose of the building changed after the 2008 merger of Wood Brook with K. B. Smiley High Schoolhouse.[38] Forest Brook Eye School became a part of HISD during the merger with the North Forest Contained School District on July i, 2013.[20]
    • When HISD assumed control, the facilities were in a damaged state, 30-twoscore% of students were habitually belatedly to school, and 75-fourscore% of students performed beneath grade level. Rick Fernandez became principal in 2013, and Tannisha Gentry, his assistant, succeeded him when he left to go principal of North Forest High Schoolhouse in 2015. Fernandez and Gentry changed the school uniforms, posted teachers in areas where students may hide, and penalized truancy with lunch detentions. Gentry added a study period and added one hr to the instructional twenty-four hours. Hurricane Harvey, in 2017, damaged the building and displaced students from nearby neighborhoods. By November 2017 80 students were not in attendance.[39]
  • Alexander Hamilton Heart School (Houston)
    • Serves much of the Houston Heights and a section of Independence Heights[40]
    • Hamilton previously had the Indians as a mascot, just in 2014 it adopted a new mascot, the Huskies, due to controversies over Native American naming.[41]
  • Charles Hartman Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves Garden Villas[42]
  • Patrick Henry Heart Schoolhouse (Houston)
  • James Hogg Centre School (Houston)
    • Serves Woodland Heights, Norhill, sections of the Houston Heights, Cottage Grove, First Ward, Sixth Ward, Rice Military, and Crestwood/Glen Cove[43]
    • Hogg, named after Governor of Texas James Stephen Hogg, was congenital on state that was reserved for school usage by the developer of Norhill.[44] James Hogg's family had donated the state occupied by the school.[45] It has 735 students as of 2015. 87% of the students are designated as low income, and the student trunk is bulk Hispanic. The schoolhouse occupies a three-story 1920s building. The school uses the International Baccalaureate program.[46]
    • Hogg's pupil body became by and large racial minority in the late 1970s.[34] In the 2011–2012 schoolhouse year, it had 700 students. 90% were Hispanic or Latino, 5% were black, and three% were white. Almost all of the students were classified equally depression income through their qualifying for free or reduced lunches. As of 2011 few Woodland Heights/Norhill-area parents sent their children to Hogg, and they instead used HISD heart schools in other areas. As of 2014 the school's test scores were beneath average. By 2014 the IB programme had been established, the number of disciplinary reports declined and became among the smallest in the entire district. There were efforts from area parents to concenter graduates of Travis and Harvard elementary schools, ii major feeder schools, to Hogg, and by 2014 the number of children from Travis and Harvard matriculating to Hogg increased by fewer than 50%.[45] In 2015 Annette Baird of the Houston Chronicle wrote that historically "had a reputation for poor student performance and low enrollment" but that it was increasing in popularity with local parents.[46]
  • The netherlands Middle School
    • Serves Pleasantville, Clinton Park, Port Houston, and sections of Jacinto City[47]
  • Francis Scott Key Eye School (Houston)
  • Bob Lanier Middle Schoolhouse (formerly Sidney Lanier Middle School) (Houston)
  • Audrey H. Lawson Heart Schoolhouse (formerly Richard W. "Dick" Dowling Middle Schoolhouse) (Houston)
    • Serves Hiram Clarke, Brentwood, Corinthian Pointe, City Park, and Almeda[48] It opened on February 9, 1968. Frank Tritico had given the school commune a newspaper highlighting the life of Richard William "Dick" Dowling, and therefore the district chose to name the school after him. It replaced the former junior loftier school component of Madison Loftier Schoolhouse and had an initial enrollment of i,107. At first it had grades 7-8, with the ninth form opening in 1969. Its magnet program began on January 9, 1993, making it Richard W. Dowling Middle School of Fine Arts; the HISD board approved the establishment of the magnet program the previous November.[49] As of 2009, 99% of the student trunk consists of racial and indigenous minorities.[fifty] In 2016 the HISD board sought to rename schools named after officials in the Confederate States of America; information technology was renamed subsequently Wheeler Avenue Baptist Church first lady Audrey H. Lawson that year.[51] Groundbreaking for Lawson's new i,500 student, $59 meg, three-story campus occurred in September 2016.[52] Madison Loftier School is located in Hiram Clarke and serves residents of the Hiram Clarke expanse.[53] [54]
  • John Marshall Center Schoolhouse (Houston) [opened in 1914 as North End Junior Loftier School]
    • Serves the Virtually North Side, Lindale Park, and a small part of Downtown Houston[55]
    • Marshall's pupil body became mostly racial minority in the early 1960s.[34]
  • John L. McReynolds Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves Denver Harbor and sections of the Fifth Ward[56]
  • Meyerland Performing and Visual Arts Eye School (formerly Albert Sidney Johnston Middle School) (Houston)
    • Serves most of Meyerland, Willowbend, Willow Meadows[57]
    • It was originally to exist named Theodore Roosevelt Middle School, but veterans of the U.South. Civil War fighting for the Confederate States of America complained, and the district ultimately named information technology after Albert Sidney Johnston.[58] The current Johnston Heart School opened in 1959.[59] On May 12, 2016 the school received its current name.[60]
    • In 2010 the schoolhouse had about 1,400 students, with 650 in the magnet program.[61]
  • Yolanda Black Navarro Centre School (formerly Stonewall Jackson Middle School) (Houston)
    • Serves Eastwood, Idylwood, the 2d Ward, and some other sections of the East End, as well as East Downtown[62]
  • Daniel Ortiz, Jr. Centre School (Houston)
    • Serves Park Place, Glenbrook Valley, and Thai Xuan Hamlet[63]
    • It was named after Daniel Ortiz, Jr. (1936-1994), an HISD employee from the Eastward End who served as a instructor and administrator, serving as HISD banana superintendent. He retired in 1992.[64]
  • John J. Pershing Center Schoolhouse, in Houston, is a fine arts, neighborhood, and gifted and talented Centre School. Pershing celebrated its 75th anniversary in the 2003–2004 schoolhouse year.
  • Pin Oak Middle School (Bellaire) is a strange linguistic communication magnet, and gifted and talented Middle School. Pivot Oak does not have an omnipresence zone, students have to apply to get in.
    • It is an "application-only" school that accepts students by application. Anyone living in Houston ISD may utilise for the Foreign Languages magnet plan, and the pupils who are zoned to Meyerland Performing and Arts Centre School (formerly Johnston Center Schoolhouse), Jane Long Middle Schoolhouse, or Pershing center schools may apply to Pin Oak's regular plan.[65] The 174,500-square-foot (xvi,210 m2) edifice sits on an xviii-acre (73,000 thousandtwo) campus.[66] The schoolhouse was named a National Bluish Ribbon Schoolhouse in 2008.[67] [68] The Bellaire Examiner stated in 2010 "Pivot Oak's innovative magnet and Vanguard programs have earned it honors and many more applicants each year than it tin can accept."[69] In 2011 Isaiah Carey of KRIV said that Pin Oak "is seen as one of the best in HISD for learning and instruction,[...]"[seventy] Pin Oak is across the street from the Houston Community College Organization's W Loop Center,[71] and the Challenge Early College High School (which is located inside HCC's West Loop Eye), both of which are located in the city of Houston (Glenmont Street is on the border of Houston and Bellaire).
  • Paul Revere Middle School (Houston) (6-8)
    • Serves parts of Westchase, Briargrove Park and Walnut Bend besides as a modest section of Piney Point Hamlet[72]
  • W. I. Stevenson Middle School (Houston)
  • Sugar Grove Centre School (Houston)
    • Serves sections of Sharpstown and sections of Chinatown equally well every bit other parts of the Southwest Management District[73]
    • Information technology was established in 2008; the campus was previously the unzoned relief elementary school Sugar Grove Elementary School, named after a church that previously occupied the school's current location.[74]
    • In the period 2009 to 2019, the school had "improvement required" ratings from the State of Texas for iv of those years. Each yr, virtually 37% of the teachers present in one schoolhouse year are not in the next. At that place were v principals in a catamenia circa 2009 to 2019. Circa 2014, 925 students in the Sugar Grove attendance zone attended schools other than Sugar Grove centre. This increased to 1,200 circa 2019.[27]
  • Tanglewood Center School (formerly Henry W. Grady Middle Schoolhouse) (Houston)
    • Serves Tanglewood and Briargrove also equally a small department of Hunters Creek Village[75]
    • Grady Heart School opened in 1992.[76] The campus previously housed an elementary schoolhouse, and was re-opened as a middle school because area parents idea Revere Middle School was too far away.[77]
  • Albert Thomas Centre School (Houston)
  • Louie Welch Eye School (Houston)
    • Serves sections of Fondren Southwest and Missouri City[78] [79]
    • Welch'due south campus was congenital for most one,133 students. In 1996 it had 1,700 students. There were too issues with the sewage system in the temporary building expanse as well as roof leaks and water issues from condensation.[80]
    • Welch previously had the Warriors as a mascot, but in 2014 information technology adopted a new mascot, the Wolf Pack, due to controversies over Native American naming.[41]
  • W Briar Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves Parkway Villages, Lakes of Parkway, and Briarhills[72]
  • McKinley C. Williams Middle School (Houston)
    • Serves Acres Homes and a part of Independence Heights[81]

The Carter Thou. Woodson School formerly had middle school levels, subsequently became PK-8, and now is PK-5. Notable alumni of the middle school:

  • South Park Mexican (Carlos Coy) - Also attended Milby Loftier School - Rapper [82]
  • Scarface (Brad Terrence Jordan)[83]
Other eye schools [edit]
  • Rule Academy Lease Schoolhouse (Houston)
  • Energized For Excellence Middle School (Houston)
  • High School Ahead Academy (Houston)
  • Las Américas Middle School (Houston) (Moved to 6501 Bellaire Boulevard from 5909 Glenmont in 2007 HISD Connect - Charter School Agreements Renewed, But Las Américas to Close)
    • 2003 National Blue Ribbon School[22]
  • The Medical and Wellness Professions Academy at Ryan Middle School - Opened 2013 in the one-time Ryan Center School[84]
  • North District Alternative Eye Schoolhouse (Houston)
  • Project Chrysalis Center School (Houston)
  • Pro-Vision School (Houston)
  • Soar Heart (Houston)
  • William A. Lawson Institute for Peace and Prosperity (Walipp) Preparatory Academy for Boys (Houston)

Unproblematic schools [edit]

Early Babyhood Centers [edit]

Gabriela Mistral Early Childhood Centre

  • Ashford Early Childhood Center (Houston)[85]
  • Bellfort Early Childhood Center (Houston)
  • David "Davy" Crockett Early Childhood Center (Houston) (The campus was formerly Brock Uncomplicated School - Elementary students were rezoned to Crockett ES)
  • Early Childhood Center (Houston, opening August 2005)
  • Fonwood Early Childhood Center
    • Originally Fonwood Uncomplicated School of the Northward Forest Independent School District,[twenty] it was built in 1964.[37] Prior to NFISD'south closure, the district had been planning to shut Fonwood Elementary.[86] HISD converted Fonwood into the surface area's early on childhood center after the takeover constructive July 1, 2013.[20] Information technology was one of the older schools of NFISD. HISD released statements highlighting the poor condition of Fonwood Elementary when doing a post-takeover bout of the school. In a bout of the campus in July 2013, Terry Grier noted a playground in poor condition, water fountains also tall for children, exposed wires, violins without strings stored in the music room, and a restroom which had a bad odor. The teacher's lounge had a plush couch, upholstered chairs, flowers, and a flatscreen idiot box.[87] HISD did not land that NFISD was planning to close Fonwood.[86] It became an early childhood heart when NFISD merged into HISD on July one, 2013.[twenty]
  • Sharon Goldstein Halpin Early Childhood Center (Houston)
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Early Babyhood Center (Houston)
  • Ninfa Laurenzo Early Childhood Center (Houston)
  • Gabriela Mistral Early Childhood Center (Houston, opened August 2005)

Interagency Alternative Schools [edit]

  • Beechnut Academy Southwest
  • Beechnut University Southeast

Online learning [edit]

HISD has an online loftier school offering regular, AP, and credit-recovery courses at its virtual school. For grades 3-12 offers online schooling through Texas Connections University @ Houston, which is operated nether contract past Connections Academy, a Maryland-based visitor which works with public and other schools to provide online teaching.[88] [89] [90]

Defunct schools [edit]

Former K-12 schools [edit]

  • Victory Preparatory University

Former secondary schools [edit]

  • New Aspirations Charter School[91]

Onetime seven-12 schools [edit]

  • Gimmicky Learning Centre (Houston) (Alternative schoolhouse)
  • Kay On-Going Educational activity Center - Closed in 2006, merged with CLC
  • Leader'due south Academy High Schoolhouse for Business organisation and Academic Success - Merged into Victory Preparatory Academy in 2011
  • Terrell Alternative School (Houston) (Originally a heart schoolhouse, airtight in fall 1991,[92] later an culling middle school, airtight in 2001[93])

Former high schools [edit]

Zoned

  • Cottage Grove High School (5410 Cornish, Houston) (Opened 1915, converted to Stevenson Elementary School in 1927[93])
  • San Jacinto High School (Houston) (Now became office of the Houston Community College Primal Campus)
  • M.C. Williams High Schoolhouse [94]

Alternative

  • DeVry Reward University (Houston)
  • Foley'south Academy (Houston)[95]
    • Foley's Academy (1987-2000) was an culling high schoolhouse where students advanced at their own step. It featured one-on-one learning and catered to at-risk students to forestall them from dropping out. Former first lady Barbara Bush and Dr. Joan Raymond headed the opening ceremony by signing in the first three students: Twanna Lynn, Shannon Gladney and Robert Martinez.[ citation needed ]
  • New Aspirations Academy Loftier School (Houston) (closed 2012)
  • Ninth Grade Academy (Houston)
  • Center Higher For Engineering science Careers (Houston) (opened in 1994, closed in 2006)
  • Houston Driblet Back In Academy (Houston) - Airtight[93]

High school programs formerly affiliated

  • Gulf Coast Trades Middle (unincorporated Walker County) - Established in 1971, no longer affiliated with HISD in 1988.[93]

Old K-8 and i-viii schools [edit]

  • Edgar M. Gregory School (Houston) (Zoned schoolhouse)[96]
    • In the Fourth Ward, information technology airtight in 1980, with students moved to Lincoln Inferior High School, which became Gregory-Lincoln Teaching Center.[97] The building became the African American Library at the Gregory Schoolhouse, which opened in 2009, after it was vacant for nearly 2 decades.[98]
  • E.O. Smith Instruction Center (Houston) (Zoned schoolhouse)
    • By Spring 2011 Atherton and East.O. Smith were to be consolidated, with a new Thousand-8 campus in the Atherton site.[99]
  • George Washington Schoolhouse (4701 Dickson, Houston) (was George Washington Inferior Loftier School at an earlier point) - Closed in 1980 due to low enrollment.[93] [100] Campus housed High School for Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice until it was sold to the adjacent St. Thomas High School.[101]

Alternative:

  • Kandy Stripe Academy (Houston) - Closed in 2018 prior to the fall semester[102]

Quondam heart schools [edit]

Former zoned schools

  • Lockett Inferior High School (303 W Dallas, opened in one-time Booker T. Washington High School building in 1959, closed June 1968[93])
  • Longfellow Junior High School (2202 St. Emanuel, Houston) (Built in 1913, converted into Dunbar Elementary in 1961[93])
  • Miller Junior Loftier School (Houston) (Campus now houses Young Women's College Preparatory Academy)
  • James D. Ryan Middle School (Houston) - Closed in 2013,[103] edifice now used for The Medical and Wellness Professions Academy at Ryan Middle School[84]
  • Terrell Middle School (Houston) (Opened 1966, later became an culling schoolhouse, closed in 2001[93]) - Every bit of 2014 information technology serves every bit an immigration detention middle for children[104]
    • In 1996 its students had disciplinary records that acquired them to be expelled from their previous schools. Circa 1996 the almanac toll per student incurred by each student was over $sixteen,000; effectually that fourth dimension the boilerplate per-student cost in Houston-area school districts was $4,000-$five,000.[105]

Other schools

  • Kaleidoscope Middle School (Houston) (Moved to 6501 Bellaire Boulevard from 5909 Glenmont in 2007 [1]) - Combined into Long Center in 2012 WebCite query result

Erstwhile principal schools [edit]

Former early childhood centers [edit]

Langston Family Life Middle, formerly Langston Early Childhood Center

2 in Houston

  • Hold Early on Childhood Heart (Houston)
    • Concord, located on the site of Kashmere Gardens Elementary Schoolhouse, closed due to low enrollment. The students will be a function of the Kashmere Gardens population.[106]
  • Langston Early Childhood Middle (2815 Campbell, Opened 1994, closed May 2004,[93] Students transferred to Crawford ES)
  • Las Américas Early Childhood Evolution Center (5909 Glenmont, Houston) (5909 Glenmont, 77081) (Closed in 2007[107])
    • Originally the preschool was located in the clubhouse of the aforementioned apartment complex. Information technology afterward received its ain edifice, which had three stories.[108]
  • Wheatley Kid Development (4900 Market place, Houston, Opened 1993, closed 2007[93])

Former culling centers [edit]

  • The Harris County Youth Village in far southern Pasadena, west of Seabrook, opened in 1972. The middle was no longer affiliated with HISD in 1997.[93]

References [edit]

  • Kirkland, Kate Sayen. The Hogg Family and Houston: Philanthropy and the Civic Platonic. University of Texas Press, September 21, 2012. ISBN 0292748469, 9780292748460.

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Uncomplicated/Middle School Combinations." Houston Independent School District. Retrieved on November 6, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Baird, Annette (2001-06-07). "Houston charter school moving into new facility". Houston Chronicle . Retrieved 2018-11-05 .
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Baird, Annette (2001-09-06). "Lease schoolhouse opens with new permanent facilities". Houston Chronicle . Retrieved 2018-eleven-06 .
  4. ^ "Wilson K-8 Attendance Zone." Houston Independent Schoolhouse District. Retrieved on Dec 9, 2016.
  5. ^ "Garden Oaks Grand-8 Omnipresence Zone." Houston Contained School Commune. Retrieved on December 9, 2016.
  6. ^ a b "History" (Annal). Thomas J. Pilgrim Academy. Retrieved on November 29, 2015.
  7. ^ a b Mellon, Ericka. "Despite the odds, Pilgrim University hits the mark" (Annal). Houston Chronicle. Monday April 18, 2011. Retrieved on November 29, 2015.
  8. ^ "'Stros open up Enron stadium in 'Classic' business concern decision." Houston Business Journal. Sunday Dec 17, 2000. 3. "Mama Ninfa Laurenzo hosted a party this week for 150 children between the ages of six and ten years old from Anson Jones and Rusk Elementary schools in the 2d Ward." Retrieved on February vi, 2012.
  9. ^ a b De León, Arnoldo. Ethnicity in the Sunbelt: Mexican Americans in Houston. Texas A&M University Press, 2001. ISBN 158544149X, 9781585441495. p. 101.
  10. ^ De León, Arnoldo. Ethnicity in the Sunbelt: Mexican Americans in Houston. Texas A&G University Printing, 2001. ISBN 158544149X, 9781585441495. p. 102.
  11. ^ Markley, Melanie (1996-10-03). "Parents, teachers struggle with enigma called middle school". Houston Chronicle . Retrieved 2019-04-23 .
  12. ^ "Approved Attendance Purlieus Maps for 2016-2017." Houston Contained School District. Retrieved on June 11, 2016.
  13. ^ "Approved Boundaries 16-17" (EaDo Concluding Boundaries). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved on June 11, 2016.
  14. ^ "Wharton K-8 Attendance Zone." Houston Independent School Commune. Retrieved on Dec 9, 2016.
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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Houston_Independent_School_District_schools

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