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New York City Department of Education

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New York City Department of Education
Department overview
FormedDecember 14, 2002; 21 years ago (2002-12-14)
Preceding department
TypeDepartment of Education
JurisdictionNew York City, U.S.
HeadquartersTweed Courthouse, New York City, U.S.
Employees138,662 (FY 2024)
Annual budget$31.5 billion (FY 2024)
Department executive
Child agencies
  • Community Education Councils (CECs)
  • Citywide Council on High Schools (CCHS)
  • Citywide Council on Special Education (CCSE)
  • Citywide Council on English Language Learners (CCELL)
  • Citywide Council for District 75 (CCD75)
  • Manhattan Borough Citywide Office
  • Bronx Borough Citywide Office
  • Staten Island Borough Citywide Office
  • Queens North Borough Citywide Office
  • Queens South Borough Citywide Office
  • Brooklyn North Borough Citywide Office
  • Brooklyn South Borough Citywide Office
Key document
Websiteschools.nyc.gov Edit this at Wikidata
City School District of the City of New York
Location
New York City
, NY
United States
District information
TypePublic
Grades3K/Pre-K through Up Higher
ChancellorMelissa Aviles-Ramos
School boardNew York City Panel for Educational Policy
Chair of the boardVanessa Leung
Schools1,722[1]
BudgetUS$37.5 billion[2]
Students and staff
Students1,100,000[3][page needed]
Teachers75,000[3][citation needed][page needed]
Athletic conferencePublic Schools Athletic League (PSAL)
Other information
Teachers' unions
Websiteschools.nyc.gov
44–36 Vernon Blvd, Long Island City, NY 11101 (Sixth Floor) NYC Department of Education – Office of Pupil Transportation Headquarters[4]

The New York City Department of Education (NYCDOE) is the department of the government of New York City that manages the city's public school system. The City School District of the City of New York (more commonly known as New York City Public Schools) is the largest school system in the United States (and among the largest in the world), with over 1.1 million students taught in more than 1,800 separate schools.[3][5] The department covers all five boroughs of New York City, and has an annual budget of around $38 billion.[6]

The department is run by the Panel for Educational Policy and the New York City Schools Chancellor. The current chancellor is Melissa Aviles-Ramos.

History

[edit]
As of 2023, the former Tweed Courthouse serves as the DOE headquarters
110 Livingston Street previously served as the DOE headquarters, and for the Board of Education before it

In the Maclay Act in 1842, the New York State legislature established the New York City Board of Education. It gave the city an elective Board of Education empowered to build and supervise schools and distribute the education fund. It provided that none of the money should go to the schools which taught religion. The fast-growing Irish Catholic community objected, but after decades of trying they did not get government funding. By 1870 19 percent of school-age children attended Catholic schools.[7][8]

Since 1960s

[edit]

Beginning in the late 1960s, schools were grouped into districts. Elementary schools and middle schools were grouped into 32 community school districts, and high schools were grouped into five geographically larger districts. One each for Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens, one for most of Brooklyn, and one, BASIS, for the rest of Brooklyn and all of Staten Island. In addition, there were several special districts for alternative schools and schools serving severely disabled students.[9]

On February 3, 1964, in protest over deplorable school conditions and segregation, over 450,000 students boycotted New York City public schools.[10] In 1969, on the heels of additional protests, strikes, and demands for community control, New York City Mayor John Lindsay relinquished mayoral control of schools, and organized the city school system into the Board of Education (made up of seven members appointed by borough presidents and the mayor) and 32 community school boards (whose members were elected). Elementary and middle schools were controlled by the community boards while high schools were controlled by the Board of Education.[11]

In 2002, the city's school system was reorganized by chapter 91 of the Laws of 2002.[12] Control of the school system was given to the mayor, who began reorganization and reform efforts. The powers of the community school boards were diminished and the Board of Education was renamed the Panel for Educational Policy, a twelve-member body of which seven members are appointed by the mayor and five by Borough Presidents.[13] Although that legislation itself made no specific reference to a "Department of Education of the City of New York", the bylaws subsequently adopted by the Board provided that the 13-member body "shall be known as the Panel for Educational Policy", which together with the Chancellor and other school employees was designated as the "Department of Education of the City of New York".[14] The education headquarters were moved from 110 Livingston Street in downtown Brooklyn to the Tweed Courthouse building adjacent to New York City Hall in Manhattan.[11][15]

In 2003, the districts were grouped into ten regions, each encompassing several elementary and middle school districts, and part of a high school district.[9] In 2005, several schools joined the Autonomous Zone (later Empowerment Zone) and were allowed to use part of their budgets to directly purchase support services. These schools were released from their regions. In 2007, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Chancellor Joel I. Klein announced the dissolution of the regions effective June 2007, and schools became organized into one of several School Support Organizations.[16]

Since 2009, the NYS Assembly has passed incremental laws keeping NYC Mayoral control over the DOE and the current law is set to expire with the end of Mayor DeBlasio's term in 2022.[17]

Management

[edit]

Territory

[edit]

NYCDOE is the school district of all five boroughs.[18] As of 1997 all of the city is assigned to schools in the NYCDOE school district except for a small section of the Bronx, which is instead assigned to the Pelham Public Schools (with tuition supported by the city government).[19]

Curriculum

[edit]

Beginning in 2003, New York City public schools citywide implemented a mathematics "core curriculum" based on New York State standards for grades K-Up Higher. To graduate high school, students must earn at least six credits in mathematics. All NYC public school students are taught through the Common Core curriculum. To receive a Regents diploma, students must score at least 65 on a Regents math exam.[20]

Health and nutrition

[edit]

The city has started several initiatives to reduce childhood obesity among students, including promoting exercise and improving nutrition in school cafeterias.

During Mayor Bloomberg's first term, white bread was entirely replaced with whole wheat bread, hot dog buns, and hamburger buns in cafeterias. In 2006, the city set out to eliminate whole milk from cafeteria lunch menus and took the further step of banning low-fat flavored milks, allowing only skim milk (white and chocolate). The New York City school system purchases more milk than any other in the United States. Although the dairy industry aggressively lobbied against the new plan they ultimately failed to prevent its implementation.

In October 2009, the DOE banned bake sales, though some schools continued to have them.[21] The DOE cited the high sugar content of baked sale goods and that 40% of city students are obese. However, vending machines in the schools operated by Frito Lay and Snapple continued to sell high processed empty calorie foods such as Doritos and juices.[22] As part of the DOE's program to create healthy diets among students, Frito Lay was obligated to put Reduced Fat Doritos in machines.[21] The DOE considers Reduced Fat Doritos a healthy snack based on its June 2009 request for healthy snack vending machine proposals.[23][24] However, the school lunch menu still contained numerous highly processed foods and high sugar content foods including chicken nuggets, French fries, French toast and syrup.[25] The New York State Assembly published a report that the NYCDOE failed to maintain or improve playgrounds, instead turning them into ad-hoc additional classroom space or parking lots.[26]

In January 2011, the DOE began a pilot program called Connecting Adolescents to Comprehensive Health (CATCH) that offers some reproductive health services to students in grades 9–12.[27] Services include providing access to birth control such as condoms, emergency contraceptives, and birth control pills.[28] Starting with 13 high schools, it has grown to serve 90 high schools by 2022.[29]

New York City began to offer free lunch to all students in 2017.[30]

Teachers

[edit]

Beginning in 2000, the DOE instituted a number of innovative programs for teacher recruitment, including the New York City Teaching Fellows,[31] the TOP Scholars Program, and initiatives to bring foreign teachers (primarily from Eastern Europe) to teach in the city's schools. Housing subsidies are in place for experienced teachers who relocate to the city to teach.[32]

In the course of school reorganizations, some veteran teachers have lost their positions. They then enter a pool of substitutes, called the Absent Teacher Reserve. On November 19, 2008, the department and the city's teacher union (the United Federation of Teachers), reached an agreement to create financial incentives for principals of new schools to hire ATR teachers and guidance counselors.[33]

Budget

[edit]

The one hundred largest school districts in the nation (by enrollment) spend an average of $14,000 per pupil every year. However, census data from 2017 shows that the NYCDOE easily placed first in the list, by spending $25,199. Only the Boston Public Schools came close to this figure.[34]

$3 billion (15.6%) of the budget goes for the 19 percent of those who attend Non City schools. This includes $1.09 billion to pre-school special education services and $725.3 million for School-Age non DOE contract special education. Another $71 million goes to non-public schools such as yeshivas and parochial schools[35] and $1.04 billion is paid for the 70 thousand students[36] attending charter schools.[37] "In school year 2012–2013, 241,900 students attended nonpublic schools, 19 percent of the city K-12 total." The $1.04B for 70,000 students in charter schools calculates as $14,285; the $71 million for the 241,900 not in public school is less than $400 per student.[38][needs update]

$4.6 billion of the budget pays for pensions and interest on Capital Plan debt.[37]

Organization

[edit]

Although the 2002 reform legislation[39] made no specific reference to a "Department of Education", the bylaws subsequently adopted by the New York City Board of Education provided that the board "shall be known as the Panel for Educational Policy", which together with the Chancellor and other school employees was designated as the "Department of Education of the City of New York".[14]

New York City Panel for Educational Policy

[edit]

The Panel for Educational Policy has the authority to approve school closings.[40] A majority of its membership is appointed by the Mayor.[40]

Community Education Councils

[edit]

There are 32 councils, with 11 members on each, two appointed by Borough Presidents and nine[41] selected by PTA leaders who are advised by parents[42] who live in the council districts, the local parents acting[41] through an election process conducted online and overseen by the Department of Education.[42] The 2009 election cost $650,000 to conduct and another election was held in 2011.[42]

According to Beth Fertig, Community Education Councils are "supposed to provide an avenue for parent engagement."[42] According to Tim Kremer, head of the New York State School Boards Association, "although education councils don't have a lot of power they can play a vital role in vetting budgets and giving feedback on instructional policies."[42] Councils have some veto power.[41] The councils were created in 2002 and their authority was increased "a little" in 2009,[42] but, according to Fertig, "many parents still claim the councils don't matter because decisions are ultimately controlled by the mayor."[42] According to Soni Sangha, the councils are mainly obscure and unknown to many parents, their forums are not well-attended, and they meet with the citywide schools chancellor.[41]

Student body

[edit]

Demographics

[edit]
Stuyvesant High School
Bayard Rustin Educational Complex, formerly Bayard Rustin High School, now hosts 6 small schools
The Bronx High School of Science
John Dewey High School's 13 acre campus, Dewey is the only public school in New York City to have a 13-acre campus. A bronze statue is also situated on the campus titled "The Key to Knowledge" symbolizing progressive education.

In October 2018, 1,126,501 students attended New York City public schools,[43] excluding 119,551 students enrolled in charter schools.[44]

About 40% of students in the city's public school system live in households where a language other than English is spoken; one-third of all New Yorkers were born in another country. The city's Department of Education translates report cards, registration forms, system-wide alerts, and documents on health and policy initiatives for parents into Spanish, French, German, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hindi, Telugu, Bengali, Urdu, Persian, Arabic, and Haitian Creole.

In October 2018, the student population was 42% Hispanic and Latino, 26% African American, 15% Non-Hispanic White, and 16% Asian American. Another 3% were of multiple race categories. Of the students, 20% were disabled, 13% were English language learners, and 73% met the department's definition of poverty.[43]

The specialized high schools tend to be disproportionately Asian.[45] New York's Specialized High School Institute is an after-school program for students in late middle school.[46] It was designed to enlarge the pool of African American and Hispanic candidates eligible for admission to the selective schools by giving them extra lessons and teaching test-taking skills.[47] Unlike other urban school districts (such as San Francisco Unified School District), New York does not use racial preferences (affirmative action) in public school admissions.

In May 2012, the New York Times reported that New York City had the fifth most segregated large city school system, after Chicago and Dallas. Hispanic students are concentrated in Washington Heights and Corona and the greatest segregation existed in black neighborhoods. It further noted that black isolation in schools has persisted even as residential segregation has declined.[48] In 2016, the Times said that 11% of the schools in the city system had the majority of non-Hispanic white students, who made up 15% of the system's total student body.[49] In May 2017, the Times published another report in collaboration with Measure of America that examined the effects of segregation. According to the report, black and Hispanic students were more likely to attend nonselective schools with majority-black and Hispanic demographics and lower graduation rates, while white and Asian students were more likely to attend selective or zoned schools with higher graduation rates. The Times also stated that zoned schools with majority white or Asian demographics tended to have higher graduation rates than zoned schools with majority black or Hispanic demographics.[50][51] While the universal high school choice policy in New York City sought to weaken the link between the conditions in students neighborhoods and their educational outcomes, a 2016 report by Measure of America found that on-time graduation rates still vary immensely by where students lived.[52]

Special Education

[edit]

In 1991 NYCDOE established an entirely segregated school district, District 75, to educate children with complex and significant needs including Autism, Intellectual Disabilities, Multiple disabilities and sensory impairments.[53][54] District 75 educates approximately 24,000 children across New York City's five boroughs.[55] In 2021, the mothers of three District 75 students on Staten Island brought a class action lawsuit against NYCDOE claiming their children were unnecessarily forced into a segregated learning environment, isolated away from their peers, and forced into excessively long commutes.[56][57] In 2023 the district was subject to disproportionately high funding cuts of $97 million dollars, affecting the district's ability to provide school supplies and extracurricular activities.[58][59]

As of the 2022-2023 school year, there were approximately 219,000 students with disabilities (20.9% of the student body) being educated in the NYC school system.[60] The most prevalent disability classifications are learning disabilities (40%) and speech or language impairments (32%). Boys outnumber girls with IEPs by two to one.[61]

Programs Serving Specific Individualized Education Program Classifications

[edit]
Autism
[edit]
Nest
[edit]

Introduced in 2003 as a partnership between NYCDOE and the NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, the Nest program is designed to meet the needs of autistic students who have average to above average intelligence, age-level spoken language, memory and attention.[62][63] Classrooms are located in community Districts 1-32 and follow an Integrated Co-Teaching (ICT) model, with two teachers: one special education teacher and one general education teacher. Class sizes are smaller than typical NYC ICT classrooms.[63] Approximately 1,700 autistic students are educated in Nest classrooms across New York City's five boroughs.[62]

Horizon
[edit]

Introduced in 2011 as a collaboration between NYCDOE and the New England Center for Children, the Horizon program is designed to meet the needs of autistic students who have average to below average intelligence, display mild to moderate language difficulties, and have mild to moderate delays in playing and interacting with other students.[64] Students are expected to participate in standard assessments. Instruction is based on the principles of Applied Behavior Analysis.[63] Classrooms are located in community Districts 1-32 and follow a "self-contained" model consisting of eight students, one special education teacher and one classroom paraprofessional.

Acquisition, Integration, Meaningful communication and Student independence (AIMS)
[edit]

Introduced in 2019, AIMS is a special education program in select District 75 schools that is designed to meet the needs of autistic students with moderate to severe delays in academic skills and have below average working memory, verbal and non-verbal reasoning abilities, speech and language and attention. Instruction is based on the principles of Applied Behavior Analysis and Verbal Behavior. Classrooms follow a "self-contained" model consisting of six students, a special education teacher, speech teacher, and paraprofessional.[63]

Alumni

[edit]

A number of New York City public school students have gone on to become celebrities, and leaders in various industries including music, fashion, business, sports, and entertainment. Some of the most notable New York City public school alumni include Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Alicia Keys, Stanley Kubrick, Al Pacino, Colin Powell, Lloyd Blankfein, Neil deGrasse Tyson (K – 12), and Jay-Z.[65]

Art focused schools, including High School of Art and Design and Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School have tended to produce notable artists, actors, and fashion over the past century, while STEM focused schools, including Stuyvesant High School and Bronx High School of Science boast Nobel Prize winners and scientists among their notable alumni.

Many now famous alumni also interacted with one another while attending public school together. One particular vocational high school, George Westinghouse Career and Technical Education High School, is widely known in Brooklyn to have helped produce four rap legends. In the 1990s, Jay-Z, Busta Rhymes, DMX, and The Notorious B.I.G. all attended the same school.[66] Similarly, at DeWitt Clinton High School in The Bronx, famed novelist James Baldwin and photographer Richard Avedon both contributed to their school's literary magazine, The Magpie, in the 1930s.[67]

Infrastructure

[edit]

School buildings

[edit]

Many school buildings are architecturally noteworthy, in part due to the efforts of C. B. J. Snyder. Since 1988 construction has been in the hands of the New York City School Construction Authority.

Most schools were built prior to the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act and are not accessible or only partially accessible to people with physical disabilities.[68] The Office of Accessibility Planning, which is located within the Office of Space Management, collaborates with other offices within the DOE to facilitate projects that specifically focus on improving the accessibility of school buildings.

Every school building is given an accessibility designation of either, No Accessibility, Partially Accessible or Fully Accessible, which is listed on the school's profile. In addition, schools are given an accessibility rating from a scale of 1–10. All buildings built on or after 1992 are fully accessible and are given a 10 out of 10 rating.[69] Students with physical disabilities get priority admission to fully or partially accessible schools.[70]

The department has closed many failing elementary, middle (intermediate) and high schools. The buildings of some of the larger schools have been turned into "Campuses" or "Complexes" in which a number of smaller school entities, educationally independent of each other, co-exist within the building.

Radio and television stations

[edit]

The Board operated radio station WNYE beginning in 1938, from studios located within the campus of Brooklyn Technical High School. Television station WNYE-TV went on the air in 1967, with its studios adjacent to George Westinghouse High School in Downtown Brooklyn. The broadcast licenses of both stations were transferred to the Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications in 2004.[71]

Analysis and criticism

[edit]

New York is one of ten major U.S. cities in which the educational system is under the control of the mayor rather than an elected school board.[72]

More recently, Mayor Bill de Blasio has received major criticism over his decision to accept proposals by charter schools to co-locate with public schools, specifically Seth Low IS and Cavallaro IS in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. Many people expressed shock and disappointment at the decision, claiming that co-location leads to congestion of school streets, overcrowded classrooms, strained resources, and a negative impact on children's education.[73]

Deaths and Disappearances of Disabled Students

[edit]

On October 4th 2013, 14 year old autistic student Avonte Oquendo walked out of his District 75 school, Riverview School in Long Island City, and went missing. His remains were located three months later in the East River, however the exact cause of death could not be determined.[74] Video footage from inside the school showed him running through the halls of the school and past a security guard before exiting through a door that had been left open.[75] In 2016 the City of New York agreed to pay $ 2.7 million settlement to the family of Avonte Oquendo in response to a wrongful death lawsuit brought against the Department of Education.[76]

On September 15th 2014, 15 year old Nashaly Perez, a disabled student at PS 371 Lillian L. Rashkis High School in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, exited a back door of her school, went missing and was located three days later at a friend's home.[77] In response to the incident Chancellor Carmen Fariña reassigned the school's principal.[78] A special investigation later found no wrongdoing by any school employees.[79]

On October 28th 2014, 21 year old Dyasha Phelps Smith, an autistic student at Brooklyn District 75 school PS368@P293, asphyxiated on a muffin, became unconscious and died during the school session.[80] The Special Commissioner of Investigation for the New York City School District later found that there was no misconduct on the part of any NYCDOE employee in relation to the incident and no staff were reassigned as a result of the investigation.[81]

On December 2nd 2016, 6-year-old Abraham Awawda, an autistic student at District 75 school P.S. K077 in Brooklyn walked out of school, went missing for over an hour, and was later found inside an apartment building three blocks away.[82]

On October 4th 2023, an autistic 15 year old student at Gotham Collaborative High School in the Bronx, bypassed his paraprofessional and exited the school building. Security cameras nearby the school revealed he boarded the BX5 bus instead of his regular school bus. He was later found.[83]

On January 2nd 2024, 11 year old autistic student Andrew Burney disappeared from P.S. K369 Coy L. Cox School in Brooklyn after opening an emergency exit door.[84] He was found later that day in Malverne on Long Island having travelled almost 20 miles on the Long Island Railroad.[85][86][87]

Mayoral control status

[edit]

Mayor de Blasio retains control over the New York City Public Schools, due to state lawmakers granting two one year extensions, currently valid through the end of June 2022.[88] The deal includes provisions which require release of more detailed budget information about the New York City schools, according to information sent out by Governor Andrew Cuomo's office. Lawmakers also agreed to give districts until the end of the year to negotiate details of new evaluation systems for teachers and principals. The deal also will allow charter schools to more easily switch between authorizers. That could mean the city's education department, which oversees a number of charter schools (but which no longer accepts oversight of new schools) could see some of these schools depart in the future for oversight by State University of New York or the New York State Education Department.[89]

Bullying lawsuit

[edit]

In April 2016, a group of 11 students and their families along with the non-profit organization Families for Excellent Schools, filed a federal class action lawsuit against the NYCDOE and Chancellor Farina, alleging that the department did not do enough to prevent bullying in schools.[90][91] The basis of the suit claimed that the atmosphere inside New York City public schools was depriving students of their right to receive an education free of violence, bullying and harassment.[90] In March 2018, the NYCDOE agreed to settle under the condition that it was required to report bullying incidents into an electronic system within one day, and that parents would also be able to submit school bullying complaints electronically.[92][93]

Size

[edit]

"It is bigger by half than the second-largest system, Los Angeles, and twice as large as Chicago, the third-largest."[94] To give this context, City Journal reported that "a separate Brooklyn district would itself be the fourth-largest in the country."[94]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2013–14 School Quality Report Results for High Schools". NYC Department of Education. Archived from the original on March 25, 2016. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  2. ^ "Funding Our Schools". NYC Department of Education. 2023–2024. Retrieved January 1, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "New York City Department of Education – About Us" (PDF). NYC Department of Education. 2019. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  4. ^ "Google". Retrieved July 22, 2016.
  5. ^ "Explore Data: Education". Where We Live NYC (City of New York). Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  6. ^ "Funding Our Schools". New York City Department of Education.
  7. ^ Ravitch (1975) pp 3–76.
  8. ^ Joseph McCadden, "New York's School Crisis of 1840–1842: Its Irish Antecedents." Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 41.4 (1966): 561–588.
  9. ^ a b Yet Another Reorganization of New York City's Public Schools Archived August 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine – Center for New York Affairs
  10. ^ Sanchez, Adam (Winter 2019–20). "The Largest Civil Rights Protest You've Never Heard Of". Rethinking Schools. Vol. 34, no. 2. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  11. ^ a b Hartocollis, Anemona (June 7, 2002). "CONSENSUS ON CITY SCHOOLS: HISTORY; Growing Outrage Leads Back to Centralized Leadership". The New York Times.
  12. ^ NYS Bill and Veto Jackets: 2002, Chapter 91, New York State Library, June 14, 2002
  13. ^ Goodnough, Abby (September 24, 2002), "A New Sort of School Board, Bland and Calm", New York Times, retrieved September 12, 2011
  14. ^ a b Nacipucha v. City of New York, 18 Misc 3d 846, 850 (Sup Ct, Bronx County 2008).
  15. ^ "The great experiment". The Economist. November 10, 2007. pp. 35–36.
  16. ^ "School Support Organizations". New York City Department of Education. Archived from the original on August 13, 2009. Retrieved August 13, 2009.
  17. ^ "State lawmakers begin examining mayoral control of NYC schools". Chalkbeat. December 16, 2019.
  18. ^ School district maps from the 2020 U.S. Census:
  19. ^ Gross, Jane (May 6, 1997). "A Tiny Strip of New York That Feels Like the Suburbs". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 17, 2016. Retrieved June 28, 2016.()
  20. ^ New York City Department of Education website, visited April 9, 2012, "Mathematics," http://schools.nyc.gov/Academics/Mathematics/default.htm Archived September 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ a b Medina, Jennifer (October 3, 2009). "A Crackdown on Bake Sales in City Schools". The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  22. ^ "Why Joel Klein Should Be Fired". Huffington Post. May 25, 2011.
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  27. ^ "New York schools offer 'morning after' pill to students". CNN. Archived from the original on September 24, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  28. ^ "Morning-after pills made available to N.Y. high school students". Reuters. Archived from the original on January 12, 2016. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  29. ^ "Other Health Topics". New York City Department of Education.
  30. ^ Piccoli, Sean; Harris, Elizabeth A. (September 6, 2017). "New York City Offers Free Lunch for All Public School Students". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  31. ^ Goodnough, Abby (August 23, 2002). "Shortage Ends As City Lures New Teachers". The New York Times.
  32. ^ Herszenhorn, David M. (April 19, 2006). "New York Offers Housing Subsidy as Teacher Lure". New York Times.
  33. ^ "UFT and DOE reach agreement on ATRs". Archived from the original on August 5, 2011. Retrieved January 8, 2018.
  34. ^ "Top 10 Largest School Districts by Enrollment and Per Pupil Current Spending". United States Census Bureau. May 21, 2019.
  35. ^ Talk:New York City Department of Education#Do political connections help non-public school? less than $300 per private school student
  36. ^ New York City Charter School Center, as accessed October 2, 2013.
  37. ^ a b "What Is in the Overall Budget?". NYCDE. New York City Department of Education. Retrieved March 6, 2017.
  38. ^ Domanico, Raymond (April 22, 2014). "How Many Students Attend Nonpublic K-12 Schools in New York City?" (PDF). New York City Independent Budget Office.
  39. ^ Chapter 91 of the Laws of 2002
  40. ^ a b Phillips, Anna M., 12 With Low State Test Scores Are Put on School Closing List, in The New York Times (Late ed. (East Coast)), December 9, 2011, last updated January 5, 2012, p. A.29, in New York Times (1980 – current) (ProQuest (database)), as accessed March 23, 2013 (subscription may be required).
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  42. ^ a b c d e f g Fertig, Beth, "Parents Claim City Bungled Community Education Council Elections", on WNYC, May 6, 2011 Archived April 19, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, as accessed March 23, 2013.
  43. ^ a b New York State Education Department. "Demographic Snapshot – Citywide, Borough, District, and School". Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  44. ^ NYC Department of Education. "DOE Data at a Glance". Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  45. ^ Wong, Alia. "How to Solve the Diversity Problem at NYC's Elite Public Schools". The Atlantic. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  46. ^ "Specialized High Schools Institute". New York City Department of Education. March 11, 2009. Retrieved May 2, 2009.
  47. ^ Gootman, Elissa (August 18, 2006). "In Elite N.Y. Schools, a Dip in Blacks and Hispanics – New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved May 2, 2009.
  48. ^ Fessenden, Ford (May 11, 2012). "Segregation in New York City's Public Schools". The New York Times. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  49. ^ Hannah-Jones, Nikole (June 9, 2016). "Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated City". The New York Times. Retrieved November 18, 2019.
  50. ^ Harris, Elizabeth A.; Fessenden, Ford (May 5, 2017). "The Broken Promises of Choice in New York City Schools". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  51. ^ Kristen Lewis and Sarah Burd-Sharps. Who Graduates? New Findings on NYC High School Admissions and Graduation Rates. Measure of America, 2017.
  52. ^ Kristen Lewis and Sarah Burd-Sharps. High School Graduation in New York City: Is Neighborhood Still Destiny? (2016) Measure of America of the Social Science Research Council.
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Further reading

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  • Brumberg, Stephan F. Going to America, Going to School: The Jewish Immigrant Public School Encounter in Turn-of-the-Century New York City (Praeger, 1986); 1982 75 page version, online
  • Carolan, Brian V. "Institutional Pressures and Isomorphic Change: The Case of New York City's Department of Education". see entry in ERIC) Education and Urban Society (ISSN 0013-1245). 2008, Volume 40, Issue 428. Originally published online on October 23, 2007. doi:10.1605/01.301-0006567006.2009. pp. 428–451.
  • Edgell, Derek. The Movement for Community Control of New York City's Schools, 1966–1970: Class Wars (Edwin Mellen Press, 1998). 532pp.
  • Howell, Fanon John. Accountable Choice: Governance, Evaluation, and Culture in the New York City Department of Education (PhD dissertation, New School University; UMI Dissertations Publishing, August 2010 (ProQuest publishing date: 2011). UMI Number: 3458102.
  • Iatarola, Patrice and Amy Ellen Schwartz, Leanna Stieffel, and Colin C. Chellman. "Small Schools, Large Districts: Small-School Reform and New York City's Students" (Archive). Teachers College Record. September 2008. Volume 110, Number 9, pp. 1837–1878. ISSN 0161-4681.
  • Klepper, Rachel. "School and Community in the All-Day Neighborhood Schools of New York City, 1936–1971." History of Education Quarterly 63.1 (2023): 107–125.
  • Lewis, Heather. New York City public schools from Brownsville to Bloomberg: Community control and its legacy (Teachers College Press, 2015) online.
  • McNickle, Chris. Bloomberg: A Billionaire's Ambition (Simon and Schuster, 2017) scholarly study of the Bloomberg mayoralty, 2002–2017; ch. 5 covers schools .
  • Ravitch, Diane. The great school wars: A history of the New York City public schools (1975), a standard scholarly history online
  • Ravitch, Diane, and Joseph P. Viteritti, eds. City Schools: Lessons from New York (2000)
  • Ravitch, Diane, ed. NYC schools under Bloomberg and Klein what parents, teachers and policymakers need to know (2009) essays by experts online
  • Reyes, Luis. "The Aspira consent decree: A thirtieth-anniversary retrospective of bilingual education in New York City." Harvard Educational Review 76.3 (2006): 369–400.
  • Rogers, David. Mayoral control of the New York City schools (Springer Science & Business Media, 2009) online.
  • Rousmaniere, Kate. City Teachers: Teaching and School Reform in Historical Perspective (1997) on Mew York City teachers in the 1920s
  • Taylor, Clarence. Knocking at our own door: Milton A. Galamison and the struggle to integrate New York City schools (Lexington Books, 2001) online.
  • Weiner, Melissa F. Power, protest, and the public schools: Jewish and African American struggles in New York City (Rutgers University Press, 2010).
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