Linda Abril Educational Academy

Linda Abril Educational Academy (LAEA, formerly Suns-Diamondbacks Education Academy[2]) is an alternative school that is part of the Phoenix Union High School District in Phoenix, Arizona.

Linda Abril Educational Academy
Address
3000 N. 19th Ave.

Phoenix
,
Arizona 85015
Coordinates33°27′52″N 112°04′23″W
Information
TypePublic secondary school
MottoTo provide a safe, nurturing environment where students can succeed as they prepare for college, career, and life.
Established2001
PrincipalMr. Rick Beck
Teaching staff13.00 (FTE)[1]
Grades11-12+
Enrollment283 (2018-19)[1]
Student to teacher ratio24.31 (FTE)[1]
Color(s)         Fire red and Yellow
MascotPhoenix
Websitewww.SunsDiamondbacks.org

History

The school began operations in 2001 as the Suns-Diamondbacks Education Academy, and changed its name to Linda Abril Educational Academy in 2016.[2] The school is named in honor of a long-serving PUHSD board member who struggled to complete high school in her youth.[3]

The school is intended for juniors and seniors who have fallen behind on their credits,[2] but students must have at least 10 high school credits.[4]

Student population

Racial makeup of Linda Abril Educational Academy's student body.[4]

  "Hispanic"[5] (79.6%)
  Native American (7.1%)
  Anglo (4.0%)
  Asian Americans (0.9%)

224 students attend the school,[4] with 79.6% of those identified are identified as "Hispanics"[4][5]

The school has a 22.7% dropout rate, and only 30.1% of students graduate after four years.[4]

Campus

The campus was originally located at 1505 North Central Avenue, in Phoenix, Arizona, United States. Suns-Diamondbacks' enrollment is 186 students. This alternative program was designed to help students (age 16-21) at risk of dropping out to complete their high school education in a small learning environment with specialized classes and schedules. Created in 2001, over 300 at risk students went from dropping out to diplomas in the school's first four years. Two new classrooms were added for an additional 40 students in August, 2006. The school is partnered with Communities in Schools of Arizona, and corporate sponsors APS, Honeywell and the Arizona Diamondbacks (MLB) and Phoenix Suns (NBA) professional sports teams. For the beginning of the 2016-2017 school year. The school moved into a new facility on 19th Avenue and Thomas Road, and accommodates up to 400 students.[6]

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gollark: Also, I fixed the proxy configuration so now mpd will always get GET requests, instead of POST, which it appears to not like.
gollark: That's somehow bigger than my "video media archive" thing.
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gollark: Just pick any, although probably don't use it in a formal context because neither is "really" a word.

References

  1. "Linda Abril Educational Academy". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
  2. "Linda Abril Educational Academy / Homepage". Linda Abril Educational Academy. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  3. Pletenik, Craig. "Suns-Diamondbacks Education Academy to be renamed after board member". Arizona Education News Service. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  4. "Administration / School Profile". Linda Abril Educational Academy. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  5. See Hispanic–Latino naming dispute for details of an ongoing dispute on the naming of US inhabitants who are of Latin American or Spanish origin.
  6. http://www.phxhs.k12.az.us/education/dept/dept.php?sectionid=8055&sc_id=1221186512%5B%5D
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