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Columbia Secondary School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science & Engineering
Location
Map
425 W 123rd Street
New York City, New York, 10027

Coordinates40°48′38″N 73°57′21″W / 40.81056°N 73.95583°W / 40.81056; -73.95583
Information
TypePublic (Magnet school) secondary
MottoChallenging Academics, a Passion for Reason and Knowledge, Strength in Diversity [1]
Established2007
School district3 (partial), 4, 5, 6
School numberM362
PrincipalVikram Arora[1]
Grades6 to 12
Enrollment718 (2020)[2][3]
CampusUrban
Color(s)Columbia blue and white   
AthleticsPSAL
MascotPride
NicknameCSS
NewspaperColumbia Pride
Websitewww.columbiasecondary.org

The Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science, & Engineering (also known as CSS) is a selective public, sixth- through twelfth-grade school that opened in 2007. A partnership between the New York City Department of Education, the community, and Columbia University, CSS serves students who have an interest in a program focusing on STEM fields.[1]

Columbia Secondary School has been cited as one of the most desirable schools in New York City.[4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Columbia Secondary School for Science, Math and Engineering
  • M.S.362 Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science and Engineering
  • Columbia Secondary School Electric Car Demo
  • Columbia Academy Personalized Learning Initiative
  • 2013 Urban Advantage Science Expo Program

Transcription

I'm definitely happy that I've picked Columbia Secondary School. The teachers, they're incredible. They're very fun, active, and they connect with the students. The diversity is amazing here and there's no other school I know that has diversity like we do. It's a challenge, and I love challenges. Challenges push me to the next level, and the next, and the next. Columbia Secondary School's core mission is to provide the talented students from Upper Manhattan and from the city of New York with an accelerated program in science, math, and engineering. Our teachers are very good. We make very good connections with them, we can talk about anything, we can just go into their class. So they can help us out and they do. One of the things I love most about this school is that the staff is on top of the kids, the kids have a great working relationship, it's a very small school, so it really does feel like a community. Last year for sixth grade I was with my principal and we went to Puerto Rico with the faculty of staff. And the course was Biodervsity in Puerto Rico, and although it was extremely fun, you were learning about the diversity about biological organisms that lived in Puerto Rico. We dropped an egg off the roof in engineering to see if it survived. I know none of my other friends that don't go here have never dropped an egg off a roof on a parachute and I tell them that and they're like, oh that's so cool I wish I could do that at my school. Dr. Maldonado was offering a course in marine biology in seventh grade and so I took his elective and that was really fun. We did presentations, we actually got to dissect lobsters and fish and do all the marine biology stuff. When my dad and I we went to the open house, we saw their philosophy program and we thought wow, no other school has that and we also saw how they did engineering hands-on activities so we were like, wow, this is a really good school. No other school has activities like this so I decided to apply and thankfully I got in. CSS has managed to attract a student body that's very unique: the talented Hispanic and Afro-American kids of Upper Manhattan. With a very early point of entry in sixth grade, most of the selective specialized schools start in ninth grade, right, so we're allowing them to enter early - earlier and then providing them a seven-year continuous experience rather than the norm which is that after three years in a middle school they have to reapply again for the high school. I live in Harlem and I thought it was perfect because I wanted a school that started in the sixth grade 'til the twelfth grade. I think it's very difficult for the kids when they are in eighth grade because they're going through a lot of transformation as teenagers to switch them again to another school. I'm looking forward to coming to Columbia Secondary School as a high school because I'll be taking a lot of advanced classes that nobody else can take, and in 11th and 12th grade I can take classes at Columbia University and that's like a head start in college. The partnership with Columbia provides us with many, many, many benefits. There is its symbolic elements of being associated with one of the great universities of this nation and of this world, then allowing us to use their name helps us incredibly. In a cultural and symbolic sense it allows us access to other organizations that public school would not normally have access to. They also provide us with concrete things like access to their campus, the use of their facilities. Many graduate students and professors have been involved doing research projects, doing internships, teaching courses, getting involved with the research program that is necessary for us to fine-tune, tweak, improve, and develop our curriculum and our school's organization. So both on the facilities side and the human resources side, they add enormous possibilities not normally afforded to public schools anywhere in the world. Being able to take creative arts, engineering, math, electives - all those things are just gonna prepare you for life and especially for college when we get into, you know, like, Harvard or Columbia University or Yale, all those very high-level colleges. We get over a thousand applicants for 96 slots in the middle school. The total pool of fifth-grade graduates in Upper Manhattan is somewhere between six and seven thousand students, so we're capturing about 20% of that population who, I think, traditionally may not have applied to a school like ours are convinced that they can and they should. I had to convince my daughter to come to the school. I said listen, just come here two weeks. Go to Columbia Secondary School for two weeks. If you don't like it, we go to the other school. She was convinced in two days. It feels really good to be in the first graduating class because I'm setting the example for the other kids and I like that because some of them might look at me as a role model since I'm in the eighth grade. It's cool to be a good student here and my daughter is surrounded by other peers that are reading the same books and doing the same things and are excited and want to talk about it. I know that whatever she's learning now is a stepping stone for the future. When the teachers are succeeding, the school is succeeding and the students are getting the extraordinary experience that is what this school was planned for.

Location

The Columbia Secondary School

Columbia Secondary School is in the Morningside Heights neighborhood in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It is co-located in the historic Lincoln School building across from Morningside Park along with the public elementary school P.S. 125 Ralph Bunche and the charter KIPP S.T.A.R. College Prep Middle School.[1]

The school serves students from all over New York City, with most of its students coming from Manhattan and The Bronx.

History

On October 21, 2005, Columbia University announced that it would collaborate with the City of New York on the creation of a new public secondary school that would address the critical need to improve education in science, math, and engineering. The school was tentatively called the "Columbia Science, Math and Engineering Secondary School," though this name was later changed to "Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science, and Engineering."

Beginning with a founding sixth grade class, the school added one grade per year until it reached its full enrollment of more than 700 students.

Academics

A wide range of Advanced Placement courses are offered at the school. Special programs offered in the school include the opportunity to take college courses at Columbia University as well as philosophy and engineering courses from 6th to 12th grade.

Students are expected to go beyond the New York State graduation requirements of 44 credits and earn a total of 63 credits, successfully complete at least one Columbia University course, and successfully complete at least 150 community service hours in order to earn a diploma endorsed by the school.

Columbia University Partnership

CSS student benefits of the Columbia University partnership include, but are not limited to, the Columbia University/Columbia Secondary School High School Visiting Student Program, internship and job opportunity at the university, and admission preference into the Double Discovery Center program. Students also have access to the Columbia University Libraries, as well as the university's computing facilities and other academic support facilities.[5]

All students at CSS are allowed to apply to the Columbia University/Columbia Secondary School High School Visiting Student Program and would be chosen for the program if they have maintained academic excellence and exceptional behavior throughout their time at CSS. This program allows students from CSS, and CSS only, to take a limited range of college classes for free. Additionally, textbook and course materials are supplied by CSS and the university.

Extracurricular activities

The CSS boys rugby team celebrates one victory at the 2013 PSAL conference championship

Though there is a wide array of science and math oriented electives, electives also allow students also interested in the humanities to fulfill their interests in these fields. The school has also put on a musical each year since 2009. The school has also participated in the Future City Competition, and their 2013 and 2020 teams had won their New York Regional competition.

In addition, CSS has several sports teams that compete in the Public Schools Athletic League (PSAL).

Publications

The first issue in volume one of the Columbia Pride, published in fall 2012

The school's official newspaper, the Columbia Pride, has published a new issue seasonally since fall of 2012, and weekly since fall of 2018. It covers topics of student interest such as news within the school, giving recognition to those making a difference in the school's community, and personal opinions from students on current events. The newspaper is available for free in print and online.

In 2014, the school released the inaugural issue of its philosophy journal, CONTRARIWISE, which features students' essays, dialogues, roundtables, letters, stories, poems, and other writings on philosophical topics ranging from time to tyranny. The journal is published annually; copies are available for purchase at the school, at events, and through the journal's website.

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c d "About CSS - Columbia Secondary School «". Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  2. ^ "05M362/HS - 2018-2019 School Quality Snapshot". Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  3. ^ "05M362EMS - 2018-2019 School Quality Snapshot". Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  4. ^ Fertig, Beth (November 20, 2013). "In Era of High School Choice, One District Retains Elite Status". WNYC.
  5. ^ "Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science & Engineering". Columbia University Neighbors. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
This page was last edited on 20 July 2023, at 12:30
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