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Automate The Schools (ATS) is the school-based administrative system used by New York City public schools since 1988. It has many functions, including recording biographical data for all students, handling admissions, discharges, and transfers to other schools, and recording other student-specific data, such as exam scores, grade levels, attendance, and immunization records.
"Small Schools, Large Districts: Small-School Reform and New York City's Students" . Teachers College Record. September 2008. Volume 110, Number 9, pp. 1837–1878. ISSN 0161-4681. Klepper, Rachel. "School and Community in the All-Day Neighborhood Schools of New York City, 1936–1971." History of Education Quarterly 63.1 (2023): 107–125.
The city has dozens of other private colleges and universities, including many religious and special-purpose institutions, such as St. Francis College, The Juilliard School and The School of Visual Arts. New York City's public school system, operated by the New York City Department of Education, is the largest in the world. More than 1.1 ...
Some city schools have started distributing the cards as raids and deportations have begun following President Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration. Last week, ICE officers took more than 100 NYC ...
Sister schools with Neighborhood School, East Village Community School, Earth School and Tompkins Square Middle School [2] PS 363: Neighborhood School: East Village: Share a building with PS 163 (S.T.A.R. Academy) [3] PS 364: Earth School: Lower East Side: PS 452 Upper West Side: PS 527: East Side School for Social Action: Yorkville, Manhattan ...
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In the 1970s, the chancellor of the New York City public school system Harvey B. Scribner launched a study to investigate allegations that the specialized schools were “culturally biased” against Latino and Black students. In response to the study legislators came together to draft the Hecht-Calandra Act.
Regents exams are administered to New York high school students in the subjects of English, Mathematics, Science, Social Studies and a LOTE (Language other than English). Students who decide not to study a foreign language may make up the regents credit by taking an appropriate number of business education, art, music, and technology classes.