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The Manhattan Trade School for Girls was a New York City public high school founded in 1902 by Mary Schenck Woolman, [1] and was the first vocational school for female students established in the United States. [2] It was established by philanthropic reformers to provide training for young women to work in trades such as garment factory work.
In 1909, the normal school moved to Downer and Kenwood, and eventually evolve into UW-Milwaukee. [3] The Milwaukee Public Schools bought the old normal school building and converted it to the Girls' Trade and Technical High School. This progressive school was an achievement of Lizzie Black Kander and Milwaukee's Social Democrats. Kander wanted ...
Mother Cabrini High School (Manhattan) The Girls' Commercial High School (became coeducational as Prospect_Heights_High_School and then closed) St. Michael Academy (Manhattan) Stella Maris High School (Queens) St. Peter's High School for Girls (Staten Island) Academy of Saint Joseph (Long Island; Coed K-8, Girls' 9-12)
This school was established in 2006 [1] by the New York State Department of Education. It was intended to support its students to the fields of architecture, engineering or construction trades. In the 2009–2010 school year this high school had its first graduating class.
High school sports participation hasn't reached parity among girls and boys. After the passage of Title IX in 1972, girls sports participation skyrocketed. But that growth started to plateau ...
The school was founded in 1909 by Nannie Helen Burroughs as The National Trade and Professional School for Women and Girls, Inc. and was the first school in the nation to provide vocational training for African-American females, who did not otherwise have many educational opportunities available to them.
Bring It On (2000) This teen dance comedy became an instant classic when it first premiered back in 2000. The Toros, a cheerleading squad at San Diego’s Rancho Carne High School, are working ...
Bradley Tech High School offers 15 varsity and junior varsity teams. All participate in the Milwaukee City Conference and WIAA Division I. Bradley Tech's traditional rivals are the Bay View High School Red Cats. [citation needed] Fall sports include cheerleading, co-ed cross-country, dance teams, football, boys soccer, girls tennis, and girls ...