Henry Viscardi School

Henry Viscardi School is a state supported special school by the Viscardi center in New York for severely disabled students requiring a specialized educational setting with medical supports.[2][3] The location is in Albertson, New York.[4][5] The school enrolls students in grades Pre-K through 12.[2] The school was originally called The Human Resources School.[2] Founded by Henry Viscardi, Jr. and supported by public and private initiatives, the tuition-free school was the only one of its kind in the world.[2] It was renamed in honor of its founder.[2]

Henry Viscardi School
Address
201 I U Willets Rd

,
11507

Information
Established1962[1]
Enrollment185[2]
Student to teacher ratio9:1:1
Information516-465-1675
WebsiteSchool website

The school's president John D. Kemp, himself born without full arms or legs has won the Henry B. Betts award known as the USA's highest honor for disability leadership and service and the 2014 Dole Leadership Prize for public inspiration.[4]

Academics

The Henry Viscardi School is a state-accredited institution of learning.[2] All students are classified for special education and provided services mandated by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).[2] It is attended by physically disabled students with high academic performance.[5]

gollark: I guess shipping stuff there is hard.
gollark: What about that random African place with no government?
gollark: He did ask some weird things at some point, but not that as far as I know? Lots of random sacrifices and murder in general.
gollark: The one thing with a baby's ribs being crushed is obvious evidence that the entire idea is bad but one idiot in Christianity is an isolated case?
gollark: There is LaVeyan or something Satanism, which is basically humanism rebranded to irritate Christians.

See also

References

  1. School for Disabled Fears a Shift; URL accessed October 26, 2009.
  2. About HVS, School website, accessed 25 February 2011.
  3. Supported (4201) Schools, New York State Education Department, accessed 26 October 2009.
  4. Advocate for disabled wins national award Newsday March 13, 2015
  5. The Neediest Cases; For an Only Son, Burdens Beyond Family Expectation, New York Times, accessed 26 October 2009.
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