Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
BJU Press also offers distance learning courses online, via DVD and hard drive. [105] Another ancillary, the Academy of Home Education, is a "service organization for homeschooling families" that maintains student records, administers achievement testing, and issues high school diplomas.
Bronx Science is the only specialized New York City high school with a campus A hallway on the first floor of Bronx Science A math and computer programming class at the school in 1960, featuring an IBM 650 op code chart (upper right). Bronx High School of Science was one of the first high schools to teach computer courses.
Eunice Hutto Morelock (1904–1947), mathematics professor; one of the first female academic deans of a coeducational college in the US; [4] namesake of a wing of the Bob Jones Academy quadrangle; Robert Kirthwood "Lefty" Johnson (1910–1971), BJU business manager from 1935 until his death; namesake of a residence hall; Darell Koons (1924 ...
In 1992 he received a bachelor's degree in public speaking from BJU and in 1996, a Master of Divinity. On the day he became University president in 2005, Jones also received a Ph.D. in Liberal Arts Studies from BJU. [1] Jones's wife, Erin Rodman Jones, who is the Director of the BJU Museum & Gallery, is also a BJU graduate. They have three ...
Mother Cabrini High School was one of the facilities that the city arranged for Success Academy to move into (Success Academy Washington Heights) Success has 45 schools with 17,000 students from kindergarten through high school. [32] [33] [12] The Bronx [34]
In 1998, Pensacola Christian College produced a widely distributed videotape, arguing that this "leaven of fundamentalism" was passed from the 19th-century Princeton theologian Benjamin B. Warfield (1851–1921) to Charles Brokenshire (1885–1954), who served BJU as dean of the School of Religion, and then to current BJU faculty members and ...
Bronxdale High School; Astor Collegiate Academy; Pelham Preparatory Academy; The Bronx High School for the Visual Arts, originally the first small school to move into the campus, moved out at the end of the 2004 school year. It currently resides in the old Mercy College Bronx campus which it shares with one other small school.
The original building now houses seven smaller high schools: the Monroe Academy for Visual Arts and Design (H.S. 692), the Monroe Academy for Business and Law (H.S. 690), the High School of World Cultures (H.S. 550), The Metropolitan Soundview Highschool (X521), Pan American International High School (X388), Mott Hall V (X242) and the newly ...