Make it easier to expand charter schools? Texas lawmakers will have that debate
Danya Perez, Staff writer
FacebookTwitterEmail
1of2
Raji Mani administers the questions as students at the BASIS San Antonio Shavano Campus, a charter school for grades 6-12, practice for the National Science Bowl in 2019.Tom Reel /Staff photographerShow MoreShow Less
2of2
KIPP Esperanza charter school representatives Jaciel Castro, center, and Michelle Schmitz, left, speak to a woman about education opportunities for her grandchildren during an event in 2017. (Darren Abate/For the San Antonio Express-News)Darren Abate /Darren Abate /San Antonio Express-NewsShow MoreShow Less
Companion bills filed in the Texas House and Senate, seeking to do away with hurdles facing charter schools that try to open or expand, have bipartisan support but will move the sharp debate over their rapid growth into the legislative arena.
Alamo Heights alums seek fellow Black pioneers who integrated the San Antonio suburb s schools
FacebookTwitterEmail
Two people talk in the shadows in a hallway at Alamo Heights High School in 1962. Alamo Heights Independent School District, which previously had been white-only, integrated in 1955 with four children from the John Henry Smith family, who lived in Olmos Park.Courtesy / Alamo Heights ISD
My friend Everett Fly, who is a National for the Humanities medalist, and I, both Alamo Heights High School graduates, are trying to identify Black pioneers of the Alamo Heights school system to recognize. These folk integrated Heights during the 1950s and ’60s. We have some names and need help finding them so we can recognize them. If you could help, it would make a great column for Black History Month in the Express-News. Joseph and I are determined to use the February event to bring awareness to history that has been denied.