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Posted
H.S. 680 Bronx Coalition Community School
1300 Boynton Avenue BRONX, NY 10472
Phone: (718) 860-8200 | Fax: (718) 842-5151 Principal: Ms. Esmie D. Gaynor
Parent Coordinator: Eric Veras (347) 563-4900 | Website

At a Glance
Grade levels: 9 to 12
Enrollment: 497
Ethnicity %: 1 W 36 B 63 H 2 A
Attendance: 72%
Graduation rate: 53.4%
7-year graduation rate: 42.4%
Alternative District 79
Neighborhood: Soundview

More info

What's special: Portfolios and community service
Downside: Poor attendance and low achievement levels

Bronx Coalition Community School for Technology was established in September of 1994, when James Monroe High School was divided into six small schools. Three of the new schools were in the old building. Three others, including Fannie Lou Hamer, Bronx Coalition and Wings Academy, were created at different sites but accepted students who were zoned for the old Monroe. Bronx Coalition Community School is a member of the Center for Collaborative Education, and organization of small, progressive schools. The school is divided into "Beginnings," "Journeys" and the "Senior Institute." According to the school web site, students must successfully present three "portfolios" to be eligible for admittance into Senior Institute. Students begin "Introduction to Community Service" and complete 25 service hours, the web site said. Unfortunately, the school has been plagued with poor attendance and struggles to bring students with low levels of reading and math up to standard. Despite continued attempts, Insideschools.org has not been able to secure a visit to this school. (Jacquie Wayans, September 2003)

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H.S. 690 Monroe Academy for Business & Law
1300 Boynton Avenue BRONX, NY 10472
Phone: (718) 860-8140 | Fax: (718) 893-3262 Principal: Mr. Benito Herrero

At a Glance
Grade levels: 9 to 12
Class size: 28
Enrollment: 587
Ethnicity %: 1 W 37 B 60 H 3 A
Attendance: 77%
Graduation rate: 42.4%
7-year graduation rate: 45.5%
Alternative District 79
Neighborhood: Soundview

More info

What's special: Great baseball team
Downside: High turnover among administrators

Monroe Academy for Business & Law is one of four small schools created in the former James Monroe High School in 1994. Sadly, because the school must concentrate on giving students basic skills in reading and math, it offers few electives. It offers no business or law courses, despite its name, according to an August, 2003, article in the New York Post. Most students come in reading at very low levels and the school is on the state's list of failing schools, called schools under registration review or SURR, because of its students' low performance on the math Regents. Located in a neighborhood with many new immigrants, the school has a transient population. Students often don't stay long enough to master high school material. The school's mission statement says: "Upon graduation, students will be able not only to read, but also to comprehend what they have read." All special education students are involved in an "inclusion" model for instruction, the mission statement said. The school suffers from rapid turnover of administrators. One bright spot: the baseball team. The three high schools in the building, Business & Law, High School of World Cultures, and Monroe Academy for Visual Arts & Design, field a joint baseball team that's one of the best in the city. (Bronx Little School, which serves elementary students, is the fourth school in the building.) Administrators did not respond to our repeated requests to visit the school. (Jacquie Wayans, September 2003)

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H.S. 692 Monroe Academy for Visual Arts & Design
1300 Boyton Avenue BRONX, NY 10472
Phone: (718) 860-8172 | Fax: (718) 860-8110 Principal: Ms. Janet Reda
Parent Coordinator: Gloria Vargas (347) 563-4982

At a Glance
Grade levels: 9 to 12
Class size: 28
Enrollment: 565
Ethnicity %: 2 W 33 B 66 H 1 A
Attendance: 73%
Graduation rate: 34.3%
7-year graduation rate: 39.4%
Alternative District 79
Neighborhood: Soundview

More info

What's special: Great baseball team
Downside: High turnover among administrators

Monroe Academy for Visual Arts & Design is one of four schools created in 1994 in the former James Monroe High School. Although this school has better attendance and higher graduation rates than other schools in the building, it still struggles to deal with the needs of a transient, largely immigrant population. The school has had frequent turnover of administrators and teachers. One bright spot: the baseball team. The three high schools in the building, Monroe Academy for Business & Law, High School of World Cultures, and Visual Arts & Design, field a joint baseball team that's one of the best in the city. (Bronx Little School, which serves elementary students, is the fourth school in the building.) The administration did not respond to our repeated requests to visit. (Jacquie Wayans, September 2003)
 
Posts: 143 | Location: Bx | Registered: 07 May 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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What happened to James Monroe HS? When did it change?


once a bronx girl....always a bronx girl
 
Posts: 2 | Location: Fort Lauderdale Florida | Registered: 19 November 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
<flatfoot>
Posted
When I went to Monroe a long time ago, I seem to remember that there were some references to "600" schools and that those were the places that you were sent to if you were a behavior problem or didn't want to learn. Is that why these schools have that number designation?
 
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WOW~~~Monroe was such an impressive school when I went there, but when the neighbourhood 'changed', it started it's backwards slide.....Took my 18 yr-old daughter up to my old 'hood last August on our summer vacation and she couldn't believe how LARGE it was! Now it seems to be segmented into several schools with low-achieving and/or foreign students....what a shame......Hopefully there will be some policy/funding adjustments made, to bring the school up to par and to give those students a good education that everyone deserves......

Monroe grad of 1970 (gosh that's a long time ago!) LOL
 
Posts: 8 | Location: Broward County, Florida | Registered: 29 December 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I am a '64 graduate of Monroe. Any others graduate or attend around that time????

I also lived on Evergreen Ave., between Westchester and Watson Aves.

If you from that era, or lived around Evergreen, please contact me.

I have some WONDERFUL memories I would like to share with you, and would like to hear YOURS as well....

Thanks,

Steve Heller


______________________________________________________________
Where love rules, there is no will to power, and where power predominates, love is lacking. The one is the shadow of the other.
 
Posts: 3675 | Location: a beautiful farm in a MORE beautiful valley. | Registered: 27 October 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Check your mailbox.....I lived on Ward right off Watson....

Interesting to find a "neighbour" after so many years and miles.....
 
Posts: 8 | Location: Broward County, Florida | Registered: 29 December 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Very interesting statisticis on Monroe HS. Looks like things got even more worse when the school split up. I gave up on attending Monroe HS back in 1966. Basicly I just stopped attending because of all the problems in the school, between hoodlums, drugs, bad teachers that also gave up. I ended up going to California on a whim one day, and it turned my life around. I finished HS, College, Career and started a family. If I stayed in The Bronx, I was going no where at the time. I do not regret the experience at James Monroe HS and growing up in The Bronx. If it wasn't for all the issues and how to surive then, I may not have tried to have a better life later. One door closes and another door opened and I listened and opened the door. Many don't change or want to change and go around in the same circles expecting others to change and not them. It starts with you first.

Thanks thebxone for sharing history on James Monroe HS. Sad statistics and incredible odds to beat, not impossible, but very difficult. Few will make it.


Stephen (Stevie) Dunne
 
Posts: 49 | Location: California | Registered: 22 January 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by flatfoot:
When I went to Monroe a long time ago, I seem to remember that there were some references to "600" schools and that those were the places that you were sent to if you were a behavior problem or didn't want to learn. Is that why these schools have that number designation?


600 schools were called 600 schools because the teachers were paid 600 dollars more a year to teach there.


Recession is when my neighbor loses his job, Depression is when I lose my job.

Recovery is when Milhouse loses his job.
 
Posts: 2843 | Location: 4 Corners | Registered: 26 October 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I attended Monroe in the 70's, I unfortunately only spent a year there due to drugs. I did play on thr football team and enjoyed campus life. Why did they turn it into the pile of crap that it s now, it was a good school...Go EAGLES


Benjamin Moyet
 
Posts: 2 | Location: North arolina | Registered: 05 June 2009Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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