Edna Karr High School

Edna Karr High School
Location
Algiers
New Orleans, Louisiana, Orleans Parish
United States
Coordinates 29°55′14″N 90°00′14″W / 29.9205°N 90.0040°W / 29.9205; -90.0040Coordinates: 29°55′14″N 90°00′14″W / 29.9205°N 90.0040°W / 29.9205; -90.0040
Information
School type Public
Established 1964
Status open
School board Inspire NOLA
Principal Harold Clay
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 1107 (2015-2016)
Campus type urban
Color(s) Purple, Gold
Athletics conference 4A District 9
Nickname Cougars
Team name Cougars
Accreditation Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, Louisiana Department of Education

Edna Karr High School is a public, open enrollment, coeducational charter school in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. The school is a college preparatory high school and is a part of InspireNOLA Charter Schools and the New Orleans Public School System (NOPS). Edna Karr High School is located in Algiers, a small community of New Orleans located on the west bank of the Mississippi River in Orleans Parish.

History

High School began operation in 1964 as a junior high school It was named after Edna Karr, an educator who served as a teacher and administrator in the Algiers community. About 18 months after the (mid-school-year) opening of the new junior high, Hurricane Betsy struck as the 1965-66 school year was starting. Local schools were closed for several days, in part because local electric power had not been restored. In addition, Karr's beautiful gym floor was ruined; blowing rain had pounded in through broken windows, and the inundated wood flooring buckled like an accordion. When school restarted, physical education classes were held outdoors until the floor had been replaced.

Olaf Fink, who served as a state senator for Algiers from 1956 to 1972, retired in May 1972 from a 33-year teaching career, with his final assignment at Karr Junior High School.[1]

Until 1990, Edna Karr operated as a typical junior high serving grades 7 through 9,[2] with an academic program that included regular education, special education, and gifted education. In 1990 the Orleans Parish School Board voted to change Edna Karr into a junior/senior high magnet school. This was at the behest of community activists. As a result, significant changes took place: upper grade levels, new courses, and high school traditions were added. In addition, policies and procedures were written for magnet school clientele. In the years since 1990, Karr completed its Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) 10-Year Update in 1998. In 2000 and again in 2005, Edna Karr earned the National Blue Ribbon Schools of Excellence Recognition.[3]

All of this changed in the autumn of 2005 after Hurricane Katrina. With the creation of the Algiers Charter Schools Association, Edna Karr was one of the first six public schools to reopen in the city of New Orleans (December 15, 2005). Edna Karr reopened as a senior high charter school serving grades 9 through 12. Under the ACSA charter, Edna Karr once again has open enrollment and is therefore open to all students who live in Orleans Parish.

Student demographics

As of the 2015-16 school year, approximately 95% of the student population is African-American, and approximately 83% of the students qualify for free or reduced-price school lunches. Most of the students will be first-generation college students in their families.[4]

Student Achievement

In 2015, Edna Karr ranked 2nd best in the New Orleans Parish School District and above 83.1% of high schools in Louisiana in academic performance.[4]

Marching band

Edna Karr's marching band is known as the "Marching Cougars" and includes 50+ instrumentalists, dancers, a flag corp, and twirlers. Some notable accomplishments of the band includes being highlighted in a documentary on New Orleans, photographed for the ESPN's 10th Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina issue, invited to perform in London, England for the city's 2016 New Years Day Parade, and a cameo appearance in Beyoncé's Lemonade visual album.[5]

The Marching Cougars' motto is "Second to None".

Notable alumni

References

External links

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