Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Richard Farias, the founder, borrowed $90,000 so he could open the school. The Houston campus originally was located in the Latino Learning Center. In 1996 the school had 100 students. In 1997 the enrollment doubled to 200. The school, which had a mostly Hispanic student body, had grades 6 through 8. Farias planned to expand the school to K-12. [4]
The Post Oak School (has one campus in Houston) The Rainard School; School of the Woods (partially in Houston) St. John's School; Houston Sudbury School; The Tenney School; The Village School; Robindell Private School (Kindergarten and grade 1) [55] - In Gulfton; Trafton Academy - In Willowbend, [56] Opened in 1973 [57]
The main office mailing address is 1321 Wirt Road, Houston, Texas 77055. While the school has a Houston address, the school campus straddles Wirt Road, with the high school [citation needed] on the property in Spring Branch and within the Houston city limits, [1] [2] and the other buildings inside the city limits of Hilshire Village.
Northwest Preparatory Academy (opened 1998, TEA sought closure in 2014) - In 2014 it had 300 students, and at the time it had two campuses. In a two year period to 2014 the state gave the school a failing academic ranking, and the state deemed its 2011 and 2013 finances substandard.
Hall Success Academy, (Opened 1995) (Unincorporated) Dr. Archie Blanson Career and Technical Education High School ( 9-12 ) La Promesa (9-12)(Established 2021 [ 47 ] )
The Al-Hadi School of Accelerative Learning (AHS) is an Islamic primary and secondary school in Southwest Houston, Texas. [5] The school is founded by Nasser Biria and is located on the premises of the Islamic Education Center of Greater Houston (IEC) of Houston, which also houses one of the largest mosques in Houston. [6]
Contemporary Learning Center (CLC) was a secondary school located in Houston, Texas, United States. CLC closed in 2011. It was replaced by DeVry Advantage Academy, operated in association with DeVry University. CLC, which serves grades 7 through 12, is a part of the Houston Independent School District.
A block in Downtown Houston is the new location for HSPVA. It formerly housed Sam Houston High School; at a later point the building housed the HISD headquarters. [25] The building is five stories and 168,000 square feet (15,600 m 2) in size, [26] at a cost of $88.4 million. [27] [28] Gensler Architects designed the building. [29]