Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Strawberry Mansion High School

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Public high school

Grades
  
9-12

Phone
  
+1 215-684-5089

Principal
  
Linda Cliatt-Wayman

Enrollment
  
About 375

Website
  
Strawberry Mansion High School

Address
  
3133 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19132, United States

District
  
School District of Philadelphia

Mascot
  
Strawberry Mansion Knights

How leadership transformed strawberry mansion high school


Strawberry Mansion High School is a public high school in Strawberry Mansion, Philadelphia. It is a part of the School District of Philadelphia. It was previously Strawberry Mansion Junior / Senior High School.

Contents

History

Strawberry Mansion became a high school in 1977. In April 1992 the school had 1,600 students both middle and high school grades. 65% were from low income families. At that time the school had a high drop out rate. That year the school had a Business Academy, a "school within a school" teaching students job skills and preparing them for further education and immediate post-graduation employment.

In June 2011 Thomas FitzSimons High School and The Young Women's Leadership School at Rhodes High School closed, and the students were reassigned to Strawberry Mansion.

In May 2013 the school had 435 students. At that time 92 students were in the graduating class and 55 of them were accepted to community colleges and/or four year universities. Some of them were unable to afford the deposit fees. As of 2013 every student is required to go through a metal detector and the school had 94 security cameras. For 62 years it had been consistently on the State of Pennsylvania's list of "persistently dangerous high schools". That changed in 2013 when it was finally taken off.

It is located in a school building with a capacity of 1,762 students and 249,000 square feet (23,100 m2) in space.

Academics

In 1992 Kimberly McLarin of the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that Strawberry Mansion was "not known for academic excellence".

In 1992 McLarin wrote that the science club at Strawberry Mansion, named Science Force 2000, was "becoming a force at city and regional science fairs." Teacher Doug Wildasin was the leader of the club as of 1992. In 1990 Strawberry Mansion submitted ten projects to the George Washington Carver Science Fair. Five projects won awards, including honorable mentions. In 1991 the school received seven prizes. In 1992 the school submitted 20 projects. 16 won prizes and/or received honorable mentions. At the Carver fair the school competed against one of the most academically prominent Philadelphia schools, including the School of Engineering and Science. Wildasin stated that educational grants that allowed his students to access technology such as computers and allowed the club to buy tools had bolstered the club.

In 1992, 16-year-old Wadiya Brown of Strawberry Mansion High submitted a science fair project that concluded that lead levels in water in residences of teachers living in Cherry Hill, Mount Airy, and North Philadelphia were high, but at levels acceptable under federal law. In March 1992 Brown, with her project, received first place in the Carver Science Fair. Because of her project, some teachers began testing their water pipes.

Football

In August 2015, the Strawberry Mansion varsity football team began to practice, after a hiatus of almost 50 years.

As the season ended, the Strawberry Mansion Knights won their last game of their schedule against Morrisville High School Bulldogs with a score of 20-19, with an overall result of 2-7.

Feeder patterns

Schools feeding into Strawberry Mansion include:

  • Dr. Ethel D. Allen School (K-8)
  • James G. Blaine School (PK-8)
  • William Dick School (K-8)
  • Frederick Douglass School (K-8)
  • Edward Gideon School (K-8)
  • William D. Kelley School (K-8)
  • E. Washington Rhodes School (K-8)
  • References

    Strawberry Mansion High School Wikipedia