San Antonio Independent School District
San Antonio Independent School District is a school district based in Downtown San Antonio, Texas, United States.[1]
San Antonio ISD is one of 15 school districts serving the San Antonio area. San Antonio ISD serves the Downtown, Midtown, and inner city areas of the city of San Antonio and a small portion of the city of Balcones Heights. With over 53,000 students (as of 2015),[2] the district is the third largest school district in the Bexar County area.[3]
Superintendents
1875-????, C. Plagge
1919-1923, Annie Webb Blanton
1946-1963, Thomas B. Portwood
1994-1998, Dr. Diana Lam
1998-1999, Dr. David F. Splitek (Interim)
1999-2006, Dr. Rubén D. Olivárez
2006-2012, Dr. Robert Duron
2012-2015, Dr. Sylvester Perez (Interim/Permanent)
2015-Present, Pedro Martinez
Board of Trustees
2010-11 President, James Howard Vice-President, Carlos Villarreal Secretary, Thomas C. Lopez Asst. Secretary, Olga Hernandez Member, Ruben D. Cuero Member, Adela R. Segovia Member, Ed Garza
2011-12 President, James Howard Vice-President, Carlos Villarreal Secretary, Adela R. Segovia Asst. Secretary, Olga Hernandez Member, Ruben D. Cuero Member, Ed Garza Member, Patti Radle
2012-13 President, Ed Garza Vice-President, Ruben D. Cuero Secretary, Olga Hernandez Asst. Secretary, Adela R. Segovia Member, Debra Guerrero Member, James Howard Member, Patti Radle
2013-14 President, Ed Garza Vice-President, Olga Hernandez Secretary, Arthur V. Valdez Asst. Secretary, James Howard Member, Debra Guerrero Member, Steve Lecholop Member, Patti Radle
2019-20 President, Patti Radle Vice-President, Arthur V. Valdez Secretary, Debra Guerrero Asst. Secretary, Steve Lecholop Member, Alicia M. Perry Member, Christina Martinez Member, Ed Garza
Next Elections 2021 Districts 1,3,4,7 2023 Districts 2,5,6
History
The district was involved directly in the San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez Supreme Court case and indirectly in the United States v. Lopez Supreme Court case.
In the 2016-2017 school year, about 5,050 students went from SAISD to charter schools, and in the last part of the 2017-2018 school year that number increased to about 10,100, while about 200 students living in SAISD were in other school districts. For the 2018-2019 school year the district ended the employment of 132 teachers over budget cuts, and budget was reduced by 6%, totaling $31 million. By 2018, in a response to a decline in enrollment, the district repurposed several campuses as magnet schools or specialty schools to attract parents who would otherwise put their children in private school.[4]
Demographics
As of 2018 91% of the students are considered low income. As of that year, people transferring from other school districts to SAISD tended to live in more upscale communities.[4]
School uniforms
All San Antonio ISD students are required to wear school uniforms. Students are required to wear white collared shirts and khaki bottoms. They are also permitted wear polo shirts with their schools' colors.[5] The Texas Education Agency specifies that the parents and/or guardians of students zoned to a school with uniforms may apply for a waiver to opt out of the uniform policy so their children do not have to wear the uniform; parents must specify "bona fide" reasons, such as religious reasons or philosophical objections.[6]
Schools
High schools
- G.W. Brackenridge High School
- Brackenridge won the 1947 UIL state football championship, the last title before the UIL divided schools into classifications based on enrollment.[7]
- Luther Burbank High School
- Center for Applied Science & Technology (CAST Tech) High School
- The school, designed by H-E-B CEO Charles Butt and inspired by the High Tech High charter schools system, opened with the ninth grade in fall 2017. Its initial enrollment was 175.[8]
- Thomas Edison High School
- Fox Technical High School
- Highlands High School
- Sam Houston High School
- Thomas Jefferson High School
- Sidney Lanier High School
- Phoenix Middle College (11-12)
- St. Philip's Early College High School
- Travis Early College High School
Middle schools
- S.J. Davis Middle School
- Joel C. Harris Middle School
- Washington Irving Middle School
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Middle School
- James Russell Lowell Middle School
- Thomas Nelson Page Middle School
- Edgar Allan Poe Middle School
- Jerimiah Rhodes Middle School
- Harry H. Rogers Middle School
- Fidel L. Tafolla Middle School
- John Greenleaf Whittier Middle School
Academies
- Advanced Learning Academy at Fox Tech (PK-12)
- Charles Clyde Ball Academy (PK-7)
- Beacon Hill Academy (PK-7)
- James Bonham Academy (K-8)
- Bowden Academy - As per a 2016 bond it is scheduled to get a $11.1 million refurbishment. Brian Sparks, in 2018, served as principal at both Bowden and Lamar Elementary, and he was making efforts to improve Bowden's performance levels to that of Lamar's. As of 2018 a significant number of parents zoned to Bowden instead send their children to other schools, public and private. Most people residing in the area are of a lower socioeconomic strata although by 2018 gentrification of the area began. Aliyya Swaby and Alexa Ura of Texas Tribune, in 2018, described it as "drab and dimly lit" and that it "is still struggling".[4]
- Agnes Cotton Academy (PK-8)
- David Crockett Academy (PK-7)
- Frederick Douglass Academy (PK-7)
- Marin B. Fenwick Academy (PK-7)
- Muriel Vance Forbes Academy (PK-7)
- Inez Foster Academy (PK-7)
- Robert B. Green Academy (PK-7)
- Nathaniel Hawthorne Academy (K-8)
- Ferdinand Herff Academy (PK-7)
- Irving Dual Language Academy (PK-2)
- Eloise Japhet Academy (PK-7)
- Martin Luther King Jr. Academy (K-8)
- Antonio Margil Academy (PK-7)
- Mission Academy (PK-8)
- Ira C. Ogden Academy (PK-7)
- Laura Steele Montessori Academy (PK-1)
- Mark Twain Dual Language Academy (PK-3)
- Riverside Park Academy (PK-7)
- Will Rogers Academy (PK-7)
- Woodlawn Academy (K-8)
- Young Men's Leadership Academy (4-9)
- Young Women's Leadership Academy (6-12)
- YWLA was ranked #1 in Texas (2012-2013)[9]
- The school, as of December 2016 also ranked as exemplary by the Texas Education Agency, has a college readiness focus with an emphasis on science, technology, engineering and math.
Elementary schools
- Charles August Arnold Elementary School
- Barkley-Ruiz Elementary School
- Mildred Baskin Elementary School
- J.T. Brackenridge Elementary School
- Andrew Briscoe Elementary School
- Bella Cameron Elementary School
- Collins Garden Elementary School
- Lorenzo De Zavala Elementary School
- Frederick Douglass Elementary School
- Marin B. Fenwick Elementary School
- Benjamin Franklin Elementary School
- Samuel Houston Gates Elementary School
- Charles Graebner Elementary School
- Highland Hills Elementary School
- Highland Park Elementary School
- Hillcrest Elementary School
- Herman Hirsch Elementary School
- Mary Huppertz Elementary School
- George E. Kelly Elementary School
- Sarah King Elementary School
- Mirabeau B. Lamar Elementary School - As of 2018 the student body was majority Hispanic but the school's attendance area was experiencing gentrification. The school has a dual English-Spanish program. Sparks, also principal at Bowden Academy, served as principal of Lamar since circa 2013 That year Swaby and Ura stated that "Over the last five years, Sparks has made Lamar a winner with the help of an engaged corps of parents".[4]
- James Madison Elementary School
- Samuel A. Maverick Elementary School
- Dorie Miller Elementary School
- Elma A. Neal Elementary School
- John J. Pershing Elementary School
- Cleto L. Rodriguez Elementary School
- Kate Schenck Elementary School
- Smith Elementary School
- P.F. Stewart Elementary School
- Ollie Perry Storm Elementary School
- Booker T. Washington Elementary School
- Woodrow Wilson Elementary School
- Woodlawn Hills Elementary School
Early childhood education centers
- Henry Carroll Early Childhood Education Center
- Esther Perez Carvajal Early Childhood Education Center
- Rafael Gonzales Early Childhood Education Center
- Wilbur J. Knox Early Childhood Education Center
- Pauline Nelson Early Childhood Education Center
- Elizabeth Tynan Early Childhood Education Center
Special campuses
- Cooper Academy at Navarro (9-12)
- Estrada Alternative Center (7-12)
- Brewer Academy (6-12)
See also
References
- "Contact Us". San Antonio Independent School District. Retrieved on March 28, 2010.
- "San Antonio ISD - Facts and Figures". San Antonio ISD. Archived from the original on 2011-07-01.
- "San Antonio ISD - I Am SAISD". San Antonio ISD. Archived from the original on 2011-06-12.
- Swaby, Aliyya; Alexa Ura (2018-12-06). "In San Antonio, school integration may not lift all boats". The Hechinger Report. Texas Tribune. Retrieved 2019-10-30. - Also at KABB (Fox San Antonio) as "SAISD is innovating to integrate its schools. Is it leaving some behind in the process" (December 4, 2018)
- "School Uniform Shopping Guide" Archived 2006-07-09 at the Wayback Machine. San Antonio Independent School District. Retrieved on May 4, 2009.
- "DOCKET NO. 008-R5-901" Archived 2006-10-11 at the Wayback Machine. Texas Education Agency. Accessed October 13, 2008.
- Dave Campbell's Texas Football, 2008 edition, page 362
- McNeel, Bekah (2018-07-16). "Supply and demand: Getting low-income kids into better jobs by getting them into better schools". The Hechinger Report. Retrieved 2019-10-31.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-06-19. Retrieved 2013-06-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)