Waterloo Central School District

Waterloo Central School District is a school district in Waterloo, New York, United States. The current superintendent is Terri Bavis.

Waterloo Central School District
Location
Waterloo, New York
US-NY

United States
District information
MottoStriving for Excellence
GradesK-12
Established1950
SuperintendentTerri Bavis
Schools4
Students and staff
Teachers172
Staff321
Other information
Websitewww.waterloocsd.org

The district operates four schools: Waterloo High School, Waterloo Middle School, LaFayette Intermediate School, and Skoi-Yase Primary School.

Administration

The district offices are located at 109 Washington Street.

History

Waterloo's school district began as individual schools located around the town's wards. Many of the schools were based in one-room schoolhouses, and totaled in 23 students. Following the advice of Waterloo Supervising Principal Albert Brown, voters approved the centralization of schools by a margin of 435 to 68 votes. All public schools from Waterloo and the nearby villages Seneca Falls, Tyre, Fayette, and Junius were brought in to the Waterloo Central district. The Central School was located at 202 West Main Streetuntil enrollment caused the school to expand to other campuses. Until these buildings were completed, schools located at 5 East River Street and on Mill Street in Waterloo served as additional school buildings.[1]

Waterloo High School

Waterloo High School is located at 96 Stark Street and serves grades 9 through 12. The current principal is Mary Thomas-Madonna.

History

Waterloo High School was originally known as "Waterloo Central School" and located on 202 West Main Street. In 1957, construction began on a new senior high school that was completed in time for the 1961 school year. Immediately, grades 9-12 began to be housed at the new building located on Center Street, while grades 7-8 remained on Main Street. Starting in 1966, the ninth grade was housed at Main Street until renovations could be made to the high school building to increase capacity.[1] The Center Street building remained home to the high school until January 2006, when the school was moved into the brand new location on Stark Street.

Waterloo Middle School

Waterloo Middle School
Address
65 Center Street
Information
MottoAcademics and Character Together - "A Class Act"
PrincipalVincent G. Vitale
Grades6-8
Websitewaterloocsd.org/MiddleSchool.cfm

Waterloo Middle School is located at 65 Center Street and serves grades 6 through 8. The current principal is Vincent Vitale. Waterloo Middle School was awarded the first National School of Character Award in 2008.[2]

History

Waterloo Middle School was part of the Waterloo Central School until 1961, when the senior high grades moved to Center Street, and grades 7-8 remained at the Junior High building at 202 West Main Street. Grade 6 would become part of the Middle School after the 1980s. In the fall of 2006, Waterloo Middle School moved to the former High School on Center Street and isnow adjacent to the new High School building.

Lafayette Intermediate

LaFayette Intermediate School
Address
71 Inslee Street
Information
Motto"Working Together as a Team to be People of Good Character!"
PrincipalShaun A. Merrill
Grades3-5
Websitewaterloocsd.org/Lafayette.cfm

Lafayette Intermediate School is located at 71 Inslee Street and serves grades 3 through 5. The current principal is Shaun Merrill

History

LaFayette was built in 1951 and served Grades K-5 for students in the northern half of the canal district in Waterloo. In the 1980s, the school's grades changed to meet enrollment demands, now offering Grades 3-5 for all students.

The building originally held two stories. In 2000, another wing on the western side of the school was constructed to build a new gymnasium and four new classrooms. The current layout of the school has the third and fourth grades as well as art classes on the second floor, while the fifth grade, library, music classrooms, and computer labs are also located on the main wing of the first floor.

The school has been recognized as a High Performing/Closing Gap School by New York State for several years.[3]

Skoi-Yase Primary

Skoi-Yase Primary School
Address
65 Fayette Street
Information
Motto"Ready, Set, Grow"
PrincipalElizabeth B. Springer
GradesK-2
Websitewaterloocsd.org/Skoi-Yase.cfmm

Skoi-Yase School is located at 65 Fayette Street and serves grades K-2. The current principal is Elizabeth Springer.

History

Skoi-Yase's construction was completed in 1953 and served grades 1-5 for Waterloo students located in the southern half of Waterloo's canal district. In the 1980s, the school changed to serve grades K through 2 for all Waterloo students. Originally, the building contained of a two story southern wing, and a western wing. The first floor of the southern wing contained the main office, gymnasium, art and music classrooms, library, and some kindergarten classrooms. The western wing contained more kindergarten classrooms, first grade classrooms, a large play room and a computer lab. The second floor held the entire second grade.

In 2000, a new wing was created off of the first floor of the southern wing. This wing contained kindergarten and first grade classrooms and a new gymnasium.

Defunct schools

Main Street Elementary

Main Street Elementary
Address
202 West Main Street
Information
Motto"Children First"
GradesK-5
The Border City campus (1994-2006)

Main Street Elementary was a multi-age school located at 202 West Main Street and serves Grades K-5. The current principal is Mrs. Wendy Doyle. The school differed from LaFayette and Skoi Yase in that grades are instead known as "levels" in which students are placed for two consecutive years.

History

The school was formerly known as Border City Multi-Age School and was located on 125 Border City Road in Border City, New York, a small region connecting Waterloo and Geneva, New York. It was annexed by the Waterloo School District in 1994. Before being integrated into Waterloo, the school was known as the Border City Union Free School and served nearby students living in the Border City region. It moved to the current Main Street location, previously the Waterloo Middle School campus, in 2006. The school was closed in 2012 due to budget constraints.

The former Border City campus was sold by the Waterloo district is now used as headquarters for God's Church of Revealed Truth.

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gollark: > A human gone rogue can be stopped easily enoughI mean, a hundred years ago, a rogue human might have had a gun or something, and could maybe shoot a few people before they were stopped. Nowadays, humans have somewhat easier access to chemical stuff and can probably get away with making bombs or whatever, while some control advanced weapons systems, and theoretically Trump and others have access to nukes.Also, I think on-demand commercial DNA printing is a thing now and with a few decades more development and some biology knowledge you could probably print smallpox or something?
gollark: You probably want to be able to improvise and stuff for emergencies, like in The Martian, and obviously need to be good at repair, but mostly those don't happen much.
gollark: "Oh no! We drove into a potatron warp! We need to reflux the hyperluminar subquantum transistors!"

References

  1. Sessler, Laverne M. (2005). A History of Waterloo, New York 1948-2002.
  2. "Transforming School Culture the Waterloo Way" (PDF). Character Education Partnership. March 19, 2009. Retrieved May 29, 2010.
  3. "Lafayette". Waterloo Central School District. Retrieved June 4, 2010.
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