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Queens_High_School_of_Teaching Latitude and Longitude:

40°44′40″N 73°43′44″W / 40.7444°N 73.7289°W / 40.7444; -73.7289
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Queens High School of Teaching, Liberal Arts and the Sciences
Queens High School of Teaching (Center Building) in January 2021.
Address
74-20 Commonwealth Boulevard

,
11426

Coordinates 40°44′40″N 73°43′44″W / 40.7444°N 73.7289°W / 40.7444; -73.7289
Information
Other nameQHST
School type Public high school
Motto"Different By Design"
Established2003
FounderNigel Pugh
StatusOpen
School districtCommunity School District 26 ( NYC Department of Education)
SuperintendentElaine Lindsey
School numberQ566
School code26Q566
CEEB code331936
PrincipalCamille Gardener
Grades 912
Enrollment1190 (2018-2019)
CampusFrank A. Padavan Campus
Color(s)Red   and Black  
Athletics conference PSAL
MascotTiger
AdmissionEd. Opt.
Website queenshsofteaching.org

The Queens High School of Teaching, Liberal Arts and the Sciences (QHST) (26Q566) is a public high school in Glen Oaks, New York, United States. It is located on the Frank A. Padavan Campus, a sprawling 32-acre (130,000 m2) landscaped campus, which contains QHST and two other neighboring kindergarten-8th grade schools: P.S./I.S. 266 and P.S./I.S. 208. [1] It is one of the only schools in New York City that has a campus. The campus—originally named the Glen Oaks Campus—was renamed in 2008 in honor of a state senator who at the time was running for re-election. [2]

The school opened in the fall of 2003. [3] It currently serves grades 9-12.

History and origin

The school was originally planned as a year-round school with short vacations throughout the year, but this plan was later dismissed, and the school now adheres to a standard academic schedule.

The original plan was to enroll 300 freshmen and gradually accept more students each year. Months before its opening, 60 sophomores were admitted as well. At this time Principal Nigel Pugh separated the school into three "small learning communities" (SLCs) to simulate the experience of attending a smaller school.

The campus was originally the site of an extension of Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, to which the school has no affiliation. During the 2009–2010 school year, the last few buildings were torn down for a sports field.

On 2 April 2016, the School officially opened the athletic field. [4]

Small Learning Communities

The school used to use a Small Learning Communities model. They were named : Emerson, Freire, and Montessori. Each had its own teachers, and students mostly attend classes only within their small learning community. Some classes – e.g. art, music, Spanish culture, Spanish - were "cross-community", meaning that students from different communities attend the same class. Montessori and Emerson were once the two biggest communities, having few seniors and an average number of juniors, sophomores, and freshmen, while Freire only had juniors, sophomores and freshmen. This has since changed. This model was gradually changed to a more traditional model.

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ "Top Projects Completed 2003-2004: The Glen Oaks Campus", New York Construction, June 2004.
  2. ^ Gootman, Elissa. "School Campus Receives a Living Senator’s Name, Much to His Opponent’s Annoyance" The New York Times, April 29, 2008.
  3. ^ Hass, Robin and Bode, Nicole. "A HAPPY CAMPUS - MOSTLY 2 of 3 schools open smoothly"[ dead link] New York Daily News, September 9, 2003.
  4. ^ NYCPSAL (2016-04-02), 16.04.02 - Queens HS of Teaching Ribbon Cutting Ceremony - 000, retrieved 2019-07-21

External links