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Manhattan Village Academy (MVA) is a small, public high school located in the Flatiron District, New York City. It consists of grades 9–12 with an enrollment of 461 students. The school is part of the New York City Department of Education. The school was founded by veteran educator Mary Butz in 1993.
Manhattan Village Academy: M439 Public Marta Valle High School (Marta Valle Secondary School) M509 Public Martin Luther King High School See: High School for Arts, Imagination and Inquiry; High School for Law, Advocacy and Community Justice; High School of Arts and Technology
Manhattan Business Academy (M392) With the exception of Quest to Learn (Q2L), all of the schools are high schools. Q2L, which moved into the building just before the 2010-2011 school year, started with three grades (6-9) and added a grade each year until it was a full middle and high school in September 2015.
The Mary Louis Academy in Jamaica Estates, Queens, announced it would be following the same model but wouldn’t say whether dropping enrollment at the $11,200-per-year school was to blame. Google
The Norman Thomas High School for Business and Commercial Education was a public high school (closed in June 2014) in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City under the New York City Department of Education.
Assistant Village Manager Ed De La Vega said Village Park, which is about 2 miles away from Wellington Community Park, will be home to the new aquatics center as well as the Wellington Sports Academy.
The Manhattan Japanese program, with a supplementary school and a preschool, opened in 1997, and the Japanese junior high supplementary school program began in 2010. [7] It previously had a Japanese day elementary school, but that closed in 2004. [8] The school previously had a second campus in Ardsley, New York. [9]
The High School of Graphic Communication Arts (H.S.G.C.A.) is a vocational high school located in the Hell's Kitchen section of Manhattan in New York City. Founded in 1925 as the New York School of Printing, the school is divided into five academies that offer basic instruction in several fields including printing, photography, journalism, visual arts, and law enforcement.