Broward County Public Schools

School system in Florida, United States

Broward County Public Schools
Location
Broward County
Florida
United States
District information
TypePublic
MottoEducating Today's Students For Tomorrow's World
GradesPre K-12
Established1915; 109 years ago (1915)
SuperintendentHoward Hepburn
Schools326 (2023)[1]
Budget$3.86 billion (2017)[2]
Students and staff
Students251,106 (2023)[3] (6th-largest in U.S.)
Teachers14,403 (2023) [1]
Staff31,691 (2023)[1]
Other information
Teachers' unionsFlorida Education Association
Websitebrowardschools.com

Broward County Public Schools is a public school district serving Broward County, Florida, and is the sixth largest public school system in the nation. During the 2023–2024 school year, Broward County Public Schools served 251,106 students enrolled in 326 schools and education centers district-wide.[1] The district is headquartered in downtown Fort Lauderdale.[4] It is the sole school district in the county.[5]

History

Prior to 1966, the county provided completely separate sets of schools for White students and Black students. In 1966, the school district began to experiment with allowing a limited number of Black students to learn alongside White students, ultimately integrating the races in 1969.[6]

William J. Leary served as superintendent until 1988; the school board did not want him to serve out the remainder of his term, so it paid him $113,516 in severance.[7]

Virgil "Sam" Morgan became superintendent of Broward county in 1988. In 1994 Broward's superintendent, Virgil "Sam" Morgan retired after leading the School district for more than five years.

In 1994 Frank Petruzielo became the superintendent. Petruzielo time as superintendent ended in 1999.

Frank Till became the Superintendent in 1999 after Frank Petruzielo retirement. Frank Till however was fired by the school board for no apparent reason in 2006.

James Notter replaced Til's in 2006. Notter in 2011 James resigned from his position as superintendent.

Robert Runcie became superintendent following the resignation of James Notter in 2011. Under Runcie the MSD school shooting took place and the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021 Robert Runice was arrested by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement on a felony charge of perjury, after a grand jury commissioned by Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2019 to review safety and security matters after the Parkland school shooting recommend it. Robert Runcie, then resigned his position In 2021.

Vickie Cartwright in 2021 was chosen as interim superintendent by the Broward county school board. Controversially she later became the superintendent. In November 2022 Dr. Vickie Cartwright was fired by the school board members that Governor Ron DeSantis's appointed. In December 2022 the newly elected board members rescinds her firing. Dr. Vickie Cartwright later resigned in 2023.

Peter B. Licata became superintendent in 2023, he later retired in April 2024 after being superintendent for only 10 months due to health concerns. Licata was replaced by Howard Hepburn as an interim superintendent on the same day.[8]

Broward County Public Schools' current superintendent is Howard Hepburn.

School Board

The current Superintendent of schools is Dr. Howard Hepburn.[9] The members of the school board, which oversee the district, are as follows:[10]

  • District 1 – Daniel Foganholi
  • District 2 – Torey Alston
  • District 3 – Sarah Leonardi
  • District 4 – Lori Alhadeff (Chair)
  • District 5 – Dr. Jeff Holness
  • District 6 – Brenda Fam
  • District 7 – Nora Rupert
  • District 8 (At Large) – Dr. Allen Zeman
  • District 9 (At Large) – Debra Hixon (Vice Chair)

Superintendent of Schools

  • William Leary (1984-1988)
  • Sam Morgan (1988-1994)
  • Frank Petruzielo (1994-1999)
  • Frank Till (1999-2006)
  • James Notter (2006-2011)
  • Robert Runcie (2011-2021)
  • Vickie Cartwright (2021-2023)
  • Earlean C. Smiley (2023)
  • Peter B. Licata (2023–2024)
  • Howard Hepburn (2024-present)

Controversies

Handling of Stoneman Douglas High School Shooting

On February 14, 2018, a former student opened fire at a Broward school, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, murdering 17 people and injuring 17 others.

Superintendent Robert Runcie and the School Board faced criticism for their handling of policies and the lack of guidance assisted to the shooter.[11] Runcie and the Board faced particular criticism, including from some parents of students at Stoneman Douglas High School, for the creation of an alternative discipline program for students accused of nonviolent misdemeanors called "Promise", which the Parkland shooter had been referred to.[12]

In the lead up to the 2018 gubernatorial election, Republican candidate Ron DeSantis vowed to remove Runcie from his office, although he conceded that only the school board could do so.[12] On February 13, 2019, now Florida Governor DeSantis announced that he had petitioned a statewide grand jury investigation.[13]

In May 2021, after the grand jury indicted him for perjury during their investigation, Runcie announced his intention to step down.[12] Supporters of Runcie accused the grand jury investigation that led to his indictment of being politically motivated.[12]

School closures and mask mandates during the COVID-19 pandemic

Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, the school district switched almost entirely to online classes in March 2020 and gradually returned to in-person instruction starting in the fall of 2020. The exact timing of school re-openings led to tension between the school board and the state government.[14] Throughout the 2020–2021 school year, the district required all students and staff to wear face masks as a preventative measure. In the fall of 2021, growing public opposition to mask mandates led Governor Ron DeSantis to prohibit local school districts from requiring masks.[15] The school board chose to defy the state government and continue requiring masks, along with several other school districts in the state. In response the Florida Board of Education voted to prevent the district from doing so and could replace elected board members.[16] DeSantis withheld funding from school districts that required masks.[15] The federal government stepped in to replace the money with federal funds, but after the state blocked that funding as well, the US Department of Education warned the state that it may have violated federal law.[17]

List of schools

During the 2023-2024 academic school year, the District served 251,106 students.[3] The district covers a total of 326 institutions: 137 elementary schools, 35 middle schools, 32 high schools, 9 combination schools, 3 technical colleges, 23 centers, and 87 charter schools.[1]

6-12 secondary schools

High schools

Coral Glades High School in Coral Springs
Coral Springs High School in Coral Springs

Middle schools

  • Apollo Middle School
  • Arthur Ashe Middle School (closed, now
    a campus of Atlantic Technical College)
  • Attucks Middle School
  • Bair Middle School
  • Broward Virtual Middle
  • Coral Springs Middle School
  • Crystal Lake Middle School
  • Deerfield Beach Middle School
  • Driftwood Middle School
  • Falcon Cove Middle School
  • Forest Glen Middle School
  • Glades Middle School
  • Gulfstream Middle School
  • Indian Ridge Middle School
  • Lauderdale Lakes Middle School
  • Lyons Creek Middle School
  • Margate Middle School
  • McNicol Middle School
  • New Renaissance Middle School
  • New River Middle School
  • Nova Middle School
  • Olsen Middle School
  • Parkway Middle School of the Arts
  • Pines Middle School
  • Pioneer Middle School
  • Plantation Middle School
  • Pompano Beach Middle School
  • Ramblewood Middle School
  • James S. Richtards Middle School
  • Sawgrass Springs Middle School
  • Seminole Middle School
  • Silver Lakes Middle School
  • Silver Trail Middle School
  • Sunrise Middle School
  • Tequesta Trace Middle School
  • Walter C. Young Middle School
  • Westglades Middle School
  • Westpine Middle School
  • William Dandy Middle School
Deerfield Beach Elementary School in Deerfield Beach
Everglades High School in Miramar

Elementary schools

  • Annabel C. Perry Elementary School
  • Atlantic West Elementary School
  • Banyan Elementary School
  • Bayview Elementary School
  • Beachside Montessori Village (K–8)
  • Bennett Elementary School
  • Mary M. Bethune Elementary School
  • Boulevard Heights Elementary School
  • Broadview Elementary School
  • Broward Estates Elementary School
  • Castle Hill Elementary School
  • Central Park Elementary School
  • Challenger Elementary School
  • Chapel Trail Elementary School
  • Coconut Creek Elementary School
  • Coconut Palm Elementary School
  • Colbert Elementary School
  • Collins Elementary School
  • Cooper City Elementary School
  • Coral Cove Elementary School
  • Coral Park Elementary School
  • Coral Springs Elementary School
  • Country Hills Elementary School
  • Country Isles Elementary School
  • Cresthaven Elementary School
  • Croissant Park Elementary School
  • Cypress Elementary School
  • Dania Elementary School
  • Davie Elementary School
  • Deerfield Beach Elementary School
  • Deerfield Park Elementary School
  • Dillard Elementary School
  • Discovery Elementary School
  • Dolphin Bay Elementary School
  • Charles Drew Elementary School
  • Driftwood Elementary School
  • Eagle Point Elementary School
  • Eagle Ridge Elementary School
  • Embassy Creek Elementary School (1992)
  • Endeavour Primary Learning Center
  • Everglades Elementary School
  • Fairway Elementary School
  • Flamingo Elementary School
  • Floranada Elementary School
  • Forest Hills Elementary School
  • Stephen Foster Elementary School
  • Fox Trail Elementary School
  • Gator Run Elementary School
  • Griffin Elementary School
  • Hallandale Elementary School
  • Harbordale Elementary School
  • Hawkes Bluff Elementary School
  • Heron Heights Elementary School
  • Hollywood Central Elementary School
  • Hollywood Hills Elementary School
  • Hollywood Park Elementary School
  • Horizon Elementary School
  • James S. Hunt Elementary School
  • Indian Trace Elementary School
  • Martin Luther King Elementary School
  • Lake Forest Elementary School
  • Lakeside Elementary School
  • Larkdale Elementary School
  • Lauderdale Manors Elementary School
  • Lauderhill Paul Turner Elementary School
  • Liberty Elementary School
  • Lloyd Estates Elementary School
  • Manatee Bay Elementary School
  • Maplewood Elementary School
  • Margate Elementary School
  • McNab Elementary School
  • Meadowbrook Elementary School
  • Miramar Elementary School
  • Mirror Lake Elementary School
  • Morrow Elementary School
  • Nob Hill Elementary School
  • Norcrest Elementary School
  • North Andrews Gardens Elementary School
  • North Fork Elementary School
  • North Lauderdale Elementary School
  • North Side Elementary School
  • Nova Blanche Forman Elementary School
  • Nova Dwight D. Eisenhower Elementary School
  • Oakland Park Elementary School
  • Oakridge Elementary School
  • Orange Brook Elementary School
  • Oriole Elementary School
  • Palm Cove Elementary School
  • Palmview Elementary School
  • Panther Run Elementary School (1998)
  • Park Lakes Elementary School
  • Park Ridge Elementary School
  • Park Springs Elementary School
  • Park Trails Elementary School
  • Parkside Elementary School
  • Pasadena Lakes Elementary School
  • Pembroke Lakes Elementary School
  • Pembroke Pines Elementary School
  • Perry, Annabel C. Elementary School
  • Peters Elementary School
  • Pines Lakes Elementary School
  • Pinewood Elementary School
  • Plantation Elementary School
  • Plantation Park Elementary School
  • Pompano Beach Elementary School
  • Quiet Waters Elementary School
  • Ramblewood Elementary School
  • Riverglades Elementary School
  • Riverland Elementary School
  • Riverside Elementary School
  • Robert C. Markham Elementary School
  • Rock Island Elementary School
  • Royal Palm Elementary School
  • Sanders Park Elementary School
  • Sandpiper Elementary School
  • Sawgrass Elementary School
  • Sea Castle Elementary School
  • Sheridan Hills Elementary School
  • Sheridan Park Elementary School
  • Silver Lakes Elementary School
  • Silver Palms Elementary School
  • Silver Ridge Elementary School
  • Silver Shores Elementary School
  • Stirling Elementary School
  • Sunland Park Elementary School
  • Sunset Lakes Elementary School
  • Sunshine Elementary School
  • Tamarac Elementary School
  • Tedder Elementary School
  • Thurgood Marshall Elementary School
  • Tradewinds Elementary School
  • Tropical Elementary School
  • Village Elementary School
  • Walker Elementary School
  • Watkins Elementary School
  • Welleby Elementary School
  • West Hollywood Elementary School
  • Westchester Elementary School
  • Westwood Heights Elementary School
  • Wilton Manors Elementary School
  • Winston Park Elementary School
  • Virginia Shuman Young Elementary School

Former segregated schools

At first all the nonwhite schools were, as elsewhere, elementary schools. In part through the efforts of principals Blanche General Ely and Joseph A. Ely, by the end of the segregation era there were three nonwhite high schools in Broward County: Crispus Attucks in Hollywood, Dillard in Ft. Lauderdale, and Blanche Ely in Pompano Beach.[18]

  • B.F. James Elementary School, Hallandale [19]
  • Bethune Elementary, 2400 Meade St., Hollywood
  • Blanche Ely High School, Pompano, opened 1952, still in use
  • Braithwaite School, a Rosenwald school, opened 1929, demolished
  • Carver Ranches Elementary School, 2201 S. 44th Ave., West Hollywood, now West Park
  • Charles Drew Elementary School
  • Chester A. Moore Elementary School, 912 Pembroke Rd., Hallandale, demolished
  • Collins Elementary School, 1050 NW 2nd St., Dania
  • Colored School No. 11, NW 3rd Ave. and 2nd St., Deerfield Beach, later known as Dillard School, then Walker Elementary School, 1925. Building houses the Old Deerfield School Museum.
  • Crispus Attucks High School, Hollywood
  • Dania Colored School, 1905, in the St. Ruth Missionary Baptist Church. Another school built 1917.
  • Davie Negro School
  • Deerfield Colored School, opened 1903, first school for African Americans in Broward County
  • Dillard Elementary School, 1959. At one time was Dillard High School, Ft. Lauderdale.
  • Fort Lauderdale Colored
  • Hallandale Rosenwald School, 1929
  • Lanier Junior High School, 1st Ave. and 9th St., Hallandale[19]
  • Hammondsville Colored School
  • Liberia Rosenwald School, also known as Attucks School, 3600 NW 22 Ave., Hollywood, 1929
  • Lincoln Park Elementary, 600 NW 19th Ave.
  • Markham Park Elementary School
  • Oakland Park Negro School, later Carter G. Woodson Elementary School, 3721 NE 5th Ave.
  • One-room school at Pompano Migratory Labor Camp
  • Pompano Colored School, 718 NW 6th St., 1928, renamed Coleman Elementary School in 1954, demolished
  • Pompano Project Elementary School
  • Sanders Park Elementary School
  • Sunland Park Elementary, 919 NW 13th Ave.[20]


Sawgrass Elementary School in Sunrise
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland
Monarch High School in Coconut Creek

See also

  • flagFlorida portal
  • iconSchools portal

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "About Us / About Us". www.browardschools.com. Broward County Public Schools. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
  2. ^ "District Budget "017-18" (PDF). Broward.k12.fl.us. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
  3. ^ a b "2023-24 Benchmark Day Enrollment Count" (PDF). Broward County Public Schools. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
  4. ^ Contact Us Archived May 14, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Broward County Public Schools. Retrieved on May 6, 2009.
  5. ^ "2020 Census – School District Reference Map: Broward County, FL" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved July 31, 2022. - Text list
  6. ^ Luxor, Scott (March 5, 2020). "Historian remembers days of integration in Broward County schools". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Archived from the original on January 14, 2024. Retrieved January 14, 2024.
  7. ^ Gittelsohn, John (January 19, 1994). "BOARD". South Florida Sun Sentinel. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  8. ^ https://www.cbsnews.com/miami/news/broward-schools-superintendent-dr-peter-licata-announces-retirement/
  9. ^ "Superintendent / Superintendent's Bio". www.browardschools.com. Broward County Public Schools. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
  10. ^ "Meet the Board / Meet the Board". www.browardschools.com. Broward County Public Schools. Retrieved February 24, 2024.
  11. ^ Travis, Megan O'Matz, Scott (May 12, 2018). "Schools' culture of tolerance lets students like Nikolas Cruz slide". Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved March 9, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ a b c d Amrus, Teo. "Facing perjury charges, Florida superintendent offers to step down to give 'peace' to Parkland survivors". Washington Post. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  13. ^ Swisher, Scott Travis, Megan O'Matz, Skyler (February 14, 2019). "Governor asks grand jury to investigate school failures in Parkland shootings". Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved March 9, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Travis, Scott (September 29, 2020). "Broward schools could open sooner than planned". South Florida Sun Sentinel. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  15. ^ a b "Florida to dock salaries, withhold funding from 8 school districts for requiring masks". NBC News. October 8, 2021. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  16. ^ Postal, Leslie (August 17, 2021). "State board takes action against Alachua, Broward schools for imposing mask mandate". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  17. ^ Goñi-Lessan, Ana (October 25, 2021). "Biden Administration warns Florida over financial sanctions against school boards with mask mandates". Tallahassee Democrat. Retrieved November 1, 2021.
  18. ^ Benjamin, Jody (June 30, 1996). "Attacks alumni celebrate past, look to the future". South Florida Sun Sentinel. p. 4.
  19. ^ a b "School Info / Our History".
  20. ^ Cunningham, Denyse. "Broward County Schools: Some Places of Instruction". Broward Legacy. Broward County Historical Commission. Retrieved January 10, 2019.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Broward County Public Schools.
  • Broward County Public Schools
  • v
  • t
  • e
Broward County Public Schools
High schoolsCharter schoolsElementary schools
Private schools
SecularReligious
Tertiary
Community collegesColleges and universities
Former schools
Former schools
  • v
  • t
  • e
Municipalities and communities of Broward County, Florida, United States
County seat: Fort Lauderdale
Cities
Towns
Villages
CDPs
Unincorporated
community
Indian reservations
Ghost towns
Footnotes
‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties
  • Florida portal
  • United States portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Population: 6,012,331 (2015)
Counties
Major city
441k
Cities and towns
100k–250k
Cities and towns
25k–99k
Cities and towns
10k–25k
A list of cities under 10,000 is available here.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Central business district
Major urban areas
Colleges
and universities
Parks and recreation
Attractions
Major shopping centers
Transportation
Major thoroughfares
  • WikiProject
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
  • ISNI