Schools
Major Pittsburgh Public Schools Closure Plan Advances
A controversial plan to close 14 schools in the Pittsburgh district is a step closer to becoming reality.
PITTSBURGH, PA — Pittsburgh Public Schools administrators on Tuesday publicly backed a consultant's study recommending the closure of 14 schools across the district and reconfiguring grades in an additional dozen. The controversial recommendations were made last fall by Massachusetts-based Education Resources Strategies.
No changes will be made for the 2025-26 school year. The district will hold a public comment before a final vote is taken on the plan, probably over the summer.
The proposed plan streamlines the district’s structure from 54 to 42 schools. It further relocates three special schools and one center program, transitions five full magnet schools and two partial magnet schools into neighborhood schools while opening three new schools: Pittsburgh Sci-Tech (6-8), Pittsburgh Northview (PreK-5), Pittsburgh Manchester (6-8).
Find out what's happening in Pittsburghfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Here are the changes:
South/West Region
Find out what's happening in Pittsburghfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Closures: South Brook 6-8, South Hills 6-8 and Roosevelt K-5.Pittsburgh Carrick High School will remain open, ensuring two high schools continue serving the region.The Roosevelt facility will house both the Student Achievement Center and the Pittsburgh Online Academy drop-in site.Brookline becomes a K-5 school, with students in grades 6-8 moving to a newly consolidated Carmalt 6-8.Langley will transition from a K-8 to a K-5 school, with students in grade 6-8 moving to Pittsburgh Classical 6-8.
Carmalt K-5 students will transition to Brookline K-5 or West Liberty K-5.Pittsburgh Arlington will become a full 6-8 school, with its PreK-5 students moving to feeder schools.The Spanish magnet program at Pittsburgh Phillips will be phased out.North Region
Closures: Pittsburgh Allegheny 6-8, Manchester PreK-8, Schiller 6-8, Spring Hill K-5 and King PreK-8.Renovated facilities: Pittsburgh Manchester will reopen as a 6-8 program. Northview Heights will reopen as a PreK-5 program, serving Spring Hill and Northview students.
Both Manchester and Northview will also become English Language Development sites.
Pittsburgh Allegheny PreK-5 will transition to a neighborhood school.
A new 6-8 STEM neighborhood school will provide a pathway to STEM programming at Pittsburgh Perry High School.
King K-5 students will move to an expanded Pittsburgh Allegheny K-5, with King serving as a swing school during renovations.
East/Central Region
Closures: Pittsburgh Arsenal PreK-5, Fulton PreK, Linden PreK-5, Milliones 6-12, Miller PreK-5, and Woolslair PreK-5.Pittsburgh Dilworth and Liberty will transition into neighborhood schools, and Sunnyside will shift from PreK-8 to PreK-5.Pittsburgh Linden will become the new home for Pittsburgh Montessori PreK-5, becoming the District’s sole K-5 magnet school.Colfax will become a 6-8 school, with Greenfield and Mifflin shifting to PreK-5.Milliones will house the new SciTech Academy 6-8 neighborhood magnet, with the current SciTech 6-12 in Oakland consolidating into a 9-12 neighborhood magnet.
Arsenal 6-8 will expand to become a IB (Middle Years Programme) neighborhood magnet, and Pittsburgh Obama will transition to a 9-12 IB neighborhood magnet.
Westinghouse will shift to a 9-12 model and add a Neighborhood Magnet, with its 6-8 students moving to Pittsburgh Sterrett 6-8.
See the full facilities plan here.
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