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City As School is a public high school located in the West Village of Manhattan, New York City. Since its opening in 1972, City As School has been distinguished by its curricular focus on experiential learning through internship. City As School is built on the idea that all children learn differently, some learn by seeing, some by hearing, others by doing. The school's stated objective is to help strengthen, motivate and guide students through their high school experience. ==History== One of America's oldest alternative public high schools, City As School was founded by Frederick J. Koury (who died July 7, 2010) and Rick Safran in 1972. In an interview with student Belinda Day ('10), co-founder Fred Koury recalled the founding of the school: Before he founded City As School, teacher Fred Koury took students on field trips whenever possible. These off-campus trips inspired Koury: connect the classroom to the real working world. Koury believed that learning could come from sources beyond the classroom. Book-learning, Koury thought, was only half of the equation. By linking experience to academics, a student's educational path was widened. "Learning is an adventure a book alone can’t teach you," said Koury. As conceptualized by Koury and Safran, New York City would be the schoolhouse. Their proposal was approved by the board of education; financing for a new public high school would be allocated. In its founding years the school experienced some difficulties. Entrenched methods had to be rewritten; old habits would not go away easily. City As School had many naysayers counting on its failure. Regardless, CAS received its BOE money and with some additional grants, including the Ford Foundation, opened with a handful of students in 1973. In order to reach out to potential students, CAS advertised on WABC radio, reaching out to students considering dropping out. Commercials would ask questions such as, "Is your school boring you?" City As School recruiters looked for tough cases and continued to grow. One of the biggest challenges Koury and his colleagues faced was selling the idea to parents, one of whom called it a "phony alternative." The class of 1973 started with ten seniors and ultimately grew to 61 students. Along with Koury and Safran, other early employees included educators Arthur Greenberg, Camri Masterman, Iris Yigdal, Paul Forestieri, Lester Denmark, Pat Ofshe, Linda Loffredo and Dick Downey. Koury said, "Curiosity is the key that opens the door to adventure. For those first students, coming to CAS changed their perception of education. Students who once hated school had new inspiration and motivation." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「City As School」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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