词条 | Education in Omaha, Nebraska | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
HistoryIn the mid-19th century, Omaha joined progressive cities that were establishing schools for girls' education. The Episcopal Church founded Brownell Hall, an all-girls secondary boarding school in Saratoga. It officially opened on September 15, 1863. Located at present-day 24th and Grand Avenue, this private religious school was named after an Episcopal bishop of New York, and was first located in the Saratoga Springs Hotel, a defunct resort. Students came to the school from Nebraska City, Bellevue, Florence, Fontanelle, Decatur and Omaha.[2] The school moved to downtown Omaha in 1868, and in the 1920s it moved to a central Omaha location. Today it known as Brownell-Talbot School,[3] and is the oldest continuing school in Nebraska.[4] Saratoga School at Meridith Avenue and North 25th Street was started in 1866 by local citizens. The one room schoolhouse was one of the first public schools in Nebraska, and perhaps the first in the Omaha area.[5] In 1927, businessmen formed the North Omaha Activities Association to re-develop Saratoga School's playing field into a college football field for Omaha University's football team. At that time the University was located immediately south in the Redick Mansion at the affluent Kountze Place suburb. With new bleachers built to accommodate a crowd of a thousand, the Saratoga Field was home to O.U.'s team until 1951.[6] The community was also home to the Omaha Presbyterian Theological Seminary, which closed in 1943. The Academy of the Sacred Heart was opened in 1882 to provide college preparatory education to young women in the Near North Side and Kountze Park neighborhoods; later, the school specifically served women in the Gold Coast and Bemis Park neighborhoods. Technical High School was the third high school built in Omaha. The city's largest public school building was a five-winged building with a large athletic field that occupied three square city blocks between Burt and Cuming Streets from 30th to 33rd Streets. By 1940, enrollment had reached 3,684.[7] The school was closed in 1984, and the building was completely renovated for use as the Omaha Public Schools central office. Today, it also serves as a home for the Career Center and Adult Education programs, serving 700-plus students daily.[8] Omaha North High School at 36th Street and Ames Avenue occupies a hilltop view covering four square blocks. Constructed like a capital E and first occupied in September 1924, the building has 49 rooms, a cafeteria, a gymnasium and an auditorium.[9]Segregated schoolsFrom the 1880s through the beginning of forced busing in Omaha Public Schools in the early 1970s, several segregated schools in North Omaha served the city's African American students. They included Howard Kennedy School, Lake School, Kellom School, Lothrop School, and Long School. Other schools in the area with large African American populations into the 1980s included Tech High, North High and Central High School. Into the 1970s, these were widely regarded as the city's "black schools", with de facto segregation based on residential housing patterns. African American students and teachers felt they were kept from achieving equity with schools across the city that white students attended.[10] A different type of segregation affected the students at the Nebraska School for the Deaf. The School, started in 1870 on {{convert|23|acre|m2}} between Bedford Avenue and Wirt Street, between 42nd and 44th Streets, served thousands of hearing-impaired students.[11] LB 1024As early as 2005, Nebraska State Senator Ernie Chambers proposed that North Omaha become responsible for educating its own students. Because of a proposal he made, on April 13, 2006, the Nebraska Legislature passed Legislative Bill 1024 that would create three separate school districts out of Omaha Public Schools, including one specifically for North Omaha.[12] The governor of Nebraska signed the bill into law later that day.[13] Among other things, LB 1024 calls for Omaha Public Schools to be broken into three separate school districts. LB 1024 requires that each new district consist of contiguous high school attendance areas and include either two or three of the seven existing high schools. That allows about 20 ways to group the seven schools, depending on which adjacent high school attendance areas are grouped with the geographically most central area. The three-district plan for OPS was proposed in amendment AM3142, introduced on the day the legislature first took up LB 1024. The suburban school districts reluctantly supported the three-district plan, seeing it as the most favorable of the bills proposed. The OPS leadership vehemently opposed the plan. AM3142 was approved on the day it was introduced by a counted vote of 33 to 6 with 10 senators not voting.[14] Five days later a motion to reconsider AM3142 failed in a roll-call vote of 9 to 31 with 9 senators not voting.[15] It is suspected that OPS may file a suit challenging the new law. On May 16, 2006, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed a suit against the governor and other Nebraska state officials charging that LB 1024, originally proposed by state senator Ernie Chambers, "intentionally furthers racial segregation." The NAACP lawsuit argues that because Omaha has racially segregated residential patterns, subdivided school districts will also be racially segregated,[16] contrary to United States law. However the schools appear to be already segregated because of the neighborhoods, and children would have the option of going to any school in the district. Public school districtsPrimary and secondary public schools in the Omaha metro area is served by almost a dozen districts.
Other public schools
Private schoolsThere are dozens of private schools in Omaha, including parochial and other types of schools.
Catholic schoolsAll Catholic schools in Omaha are operated by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Omaha.
Weekend complementary education institutionsThe Omaha Japanese School (オマハ日本語補習授業校 Omaha Nihongo Hoshū Jugyō Kō), a Japanese weekend educational program approved by the Japanese Ministry of Education,[17] holds its classes at the St. Mark Lutheran Church in Omaha.[18] See also{{Portal|Nebraska|Education}}
References1. ^(1993).From Pony Express to Wireless: Brownell-Talbot College Preparatory School 140 Years of History {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080907185025/http://www.btaquatics.org/B-T%20History.htm |date=2008-09-07 }}. Brownell-Talbot Quarterly. Fall/Winter 1993-94. Retrieved 8/16/07. {{OPS HS}}{{Omaha}}{{Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Omaha}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Education In Omaha, Nebraska}}2. ^Morton and Watkins. (1916) History of Nebraska. p 515. 3. ^(1993). From Pony Express to Wireless: Brownell-Talbot College Preparatory School: 140 Years of History {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080907185025/http://www.btaquatics.org/B-T%20History.htm |date=2008-09-07 }}. Fall/Winter 1993-94 Brownell-Talbot Quarterly. 4. ^Morton and Watkins. (1916) p 515. 5. ^(n.d.) "Saratoga History." Saratoga Elementary School website. 6. ^(n.d.) Saratoga Field {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929051638/http://www.unoalumni.org/About_Us/Flashback/Archive/238/index.asp |date=2007-09-29 }} University of Nebraska at Omaha website. 7. ^(n.d.) History of Tech High. Gifford Park Neighborhood Association. 8. ^(n.d.) About Technical High School 9. ^(nd) Historical photo Omaha Public Library. Retrieved 6/4/07. 10. ^(n.d.) Excerpts from Interviews - Evelyn Montgomery {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071211222709/http://webmail.ops.org/~john.mezger/people |date=2007-12-11 }} Crestridge School of International/Global Studies, Omaha Public Schools. Retrieved 9/11/07. 11. ^Omaha from the Air HistoricOmaha.com - Taken from the Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved 9/11/07. 12. ^{{cite web | title=Legislative Bill 1024: An act relating to schools | publisher=State of Nebraska | year=2006 | url=http://www.unicam.state.ne.us/legal/SLIP_LB1024.pdf |format=PDF}} 13. ^{{cite news | author=Sam Dillon | title=Law to Segregate Omaha Schools Divides Nebraska | publisher=New York Times | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/15/us/15omaha.html | date=April 15, 2006 | accessdate=May 1, 2010}} 14. ^{{cite web | title=Legislative Journal | publisher=State of Nebraska | date=Apr 6, 2006 | url=http://www.unicam.state.ne.us/journal/2006/jday56.pdf |format=PDF}} 15. ^{{cite web | title=Legislative Journal | publisher=State of Nebraska | date=Apr 11, 2006 | url=http://www.unicam.state.ne.us/journal/2006/jday58.pdf |format=PDF}} 16. ^{{cite news | author=Sam Dillon | title=Schools Plan in Nebraska Is Challenged | publisher=New York Times | date=May 17, 2006 | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/17/us/17naacp.html }} 17. ^"日本人学校及び日本語補習授業校のご案内" ([https://www.webcitation.org/6Xd1lyZNM?url=http://www.chicago.us.emb-japan.go.jp/con_schools.htm Archive]). Consulate General of Japan in Chicago. Retrieved on April 8, 2015. 18. ^"所在地." Omaha Japanese School. Retrieved on April 1, 2015. "Omaha Japanese School St. Mark Lutheran Church 1821 N 90th St Omaha, NE 68114" 2 : Education in Omaha, Nebraska|Government of Omaha, Nebraska |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。