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Charles Schaeffer School; Daniel Boone School (now houses Achieve Academy of Philadelphia) David Farragut School; David Landreth School; Fairhill Elementary School, closed 2013; Francis Read School, closed 1980; Gen. David B. Birney School (currently Lindley Academy Charter School at Birney) Gen. John F. Reynolds School, closed 2013; George L ...
This template displays all of the school districts in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania along with other schools. It lists all schools above primary education but below tertiary education (above elementary schools but below colleges and universities).
The School District of Philadelphia operates 151 elementary and K-8 schools, 16 middle schools, and 57 high schools. [14] The remaining 83 public schools are independently operated charter schools. [15] Charter schools are authorized by the School District of Philadelphia, and are accountable to it.
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Greene Street Friends School, a Quaker school grades PK-8, school under the care of Green Street Monthly Meeting; Holmesburg Christian Academy, a non-denominational evangelical Christian school in NE Philadelphia for grades PK-8, was founded in 1975 as a ministry of Holmesburg Baptist Church. [2] Philadelphia Free School, a Sudbury school PK-12
This is a list of school districts in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, a U.S. state.. The article for each Pennsylvania county with more than one school district includes a map showing all public school districts in the county.
The former school building, located between Parrish and Ogden Streets on 12th Avenue in Philadelphia, has been abandoned since 1986. [7] The current Spring Garden School is located at 1146 Melon Street. As of the 2023-2024 school year, 81% of students live in the Catchment Area for Spring Garden School. [8]
The Board was originally established in the Charter of the Erection of the District in 1818. In 2001, The Governor of Pennsylvania Mark Schweiker took control of the schools and therefore established the School Reform Commission. Governor Tom Wolf relinquished control of the district to recreate a City-run Board of Education. [1]