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  1. List of former high schools in New Orleans. This is a list of former public and private high schools in New Orleans. Holy angels.

  2. A Confederacy of Dunces is a picaresque novel by American novelist John Kennedy Toole which reached publication in 1980, eleven years after Toole's death. [2] Published through the efforts of writer Walker Percy (who also contributed a foreword) and Toole's mother, Thelma, the book became first a cult classic, then a mainstream success; it earned Toole a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for Fiction ...

    • John Kennedy Toole
    • 1980
    • History
    • Surveys of Public Opinion
    • Curriculum
    • Push For Desegregation
    • Schools
    • Schools That May Or May Not Be Open in 2015
    • Former Schools
    • Further Reading
    • External Links

    Jim Crow Era

    Like virtually all areas in the South, New Orleans had a segregated public school system for most of its early history, as government officials (who were all White, due to Black disfranchisement) did not want their children in the same schools as Black children. In 1960, the schools were integrated, which caused a national scandal and crisis. Katy Reckdahl of The Times Picayunewrote that at the time, "outside observers expressed shock that desegregation provoked such strife in heterogeneous,...

    Reorganization of school system following Hurricane Katrina

    NOPS was wholly controlled by the OPSB before Hurricane Katrina and was the New Orleans area's largest school district before Katrina devastated the city on August 29, 2005, damaging or destroying more than 100 of the district's 128 school buildings. NOPS served approximately 65,000 students pre-Katrina. For decades prior to Hurricane Katrina's landfall, the OPSB-administered system was widely recognized as the lowest performing school district in Louisiana. According to researchers Carl L. B...

    Reunification

    According to Senate Bill 432, passed by the Louisiana State Legislature on May 10, 2016 and signed into law by Governor of Louisiana John Bel Edwardson May 12, 2016, all public schools in New Orleans will return to supervision by OPSB by July 1, 2018.

    A 2009 survey conducted by Tulane University's Cowen Institute for Public Education Initiatives, which is listed as a "Key Partner" of New Schools for New Orleans, a charter school advocacy group, indicated that the state's takeover of the majority of NOPS and the subsequent spread of charters was viewed with strong approval, by both parents of stu...

    In the mid-1800s the German American community of New Orleans attempted to have the German language supplant French as a subject in school. The German Society made efforts to have German introduced into the school system. In 1910 the German language was added to the NOPS curriculum, making it a regular subject in high schools and, at the elementary...

    In the late 1950s, Dorothy Mae Taylor, the president of two chapters of the Parent Teacher Association who in 1971 became the first African-American woman to serve in the Louisiana House of Representatives, organized a march to the school board to demand equal resources for black children in public schools. The board eventually acquiesced, and the ...

    Fifty-three public schools opened in New Orleans for the 2006–2007 school year. This number included schools directly administered by the OPSB or the RSD, or schools chartered by the OPSB or the RSD. By November 2006, the system was approaching half of its pre-Katrina enrollment, with 36% of the students enrolled in independent charter schools, 18%...

    Ray Abrams School
    Avery Alexander Elementary (McDonogh #39)
    Henry W. Allen Elementary (now New Orleans Charter Science and Mathematics High School)
    Alternative High

    RSD chartered: 1. Sojourner Truth Academy Pre-Katrina: 1. German High School, in the early 1850s the German American community of New Orleans made plans to establish the school in the Third District of New Orleans. It was nonsectarian and had no religious instruction. The school closed during a yellow feverepidemic in 1853

    Baker, Liva (1996). The Second Battle of New Orleans: The Hundred-Year Struggle to Integrate the Schools (1st ed.). New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780060168087. LCCN 96-4158. OCLC 34026757.

  3. 2025 Best High Schools in New Orleans. 2025 rankings and reviews for high schools in New Orleans. Compare test scores, key statistics, and ratings for high schools near you.

  4. See the best high schools in the New Orleans, LA metro area based on ranking, graduation rate, college readiness and other key stats. Learn more here.

  5. Listed below are all public and private high schools located in New Orleans, Louisiana. Click on the public or private school to view that specific high school's details. If you are looking to move to New Orleans, LA consider which high school your children would attend.

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  7. Explore the best schools in your area based on rigorous analysis of key statistics and millions of reviews from students and parents using data from the U.S. Department of Education. Read more on how this ranking was calculated. Where Niche Grades come from and how Niche calculates rankings.

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