Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
St. Gregory the Great School (Crown Heights and Flatbush) - Closed in 2020 [9] Queens. Corpus Christi School (Woodside) - Closed in 2012. [18] Holy Trinity Catholic Academy - Closed in 2020 [16] La Salle School, formerly known as St. Gabriel's School until 2008 (East Elmhurst) - Closed in 2011 due to financial constraints. [19]
In Queens Village, 15% of elementary school students missed twenty or more days per school year, lower than the citywide average of 20%. [26]: 24 (PDF p. 55) [25]: 6 Additionally, 83% of high school students in Queens Village graduate on time, higher than the citywide average of 75%. [25]: 6
Long Island's Nassau and Suffolk counties are home to 125 public school districts, containing a total of 656 public schools. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The list below contains each of Long Island's school districts, along with their respective schools.
Incarnation Children's Center (ICC) is a nursing facility for children living with HIV in New York City. From 1989 until 2000 the center operated as a foster care boarding home; since then it has concentrated on providing medical care. The ICC is a non-profit corporation affiliated with the Archdiocese of New York and Columbia University.
College Fair: Each year, St. Michael Academy hosted a Catholic college fair at the school as a gift to the community. Admission was free, and students from Catholic schools across the city attended to learn about Catholic colleges across the country. This was the only college fair in the region that focused on Catholic higher education.
The Mary Louis Academy (TMLA) is an all-girls private Catholic college-preparatory academy located in Jamaica Estates, Queens, New York City.TMLA's 5-acre (20,000 m 2) campus encompasses eight buildings situated on private grounds at the top of one of the highest hills in Queens, hence TMLA's interscholastic nickname, "The Hilltoppers".
The Incarnation School is located at 570 West 175th Street. In 1914, the school which had been built with the church and completed in 1910 was in the charge of two Sisters of Charity of New York and two lay teachers, who oversaw 125 pupils. [2] It was formerly staffed by the De La Salle Christian Brothers. [4]
Both campuses continued as four-year high school programs, operated by the Diocese of Brooklyn. [4] The diocese closed the Brooklyn campus in 1985, leaving the Queens campus as the Cathedral Preparatory Seminary. [5] In 2002, the rector of Cathedral Prep, Monsignor Charles M. Kavanagh, was accused of sexual abuse by