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  1. BTW 2023-2024 Highlights. Instructional Support, New Teacher Induction, Schoolwide Highlights, Cohort Highlights.

  2. Tel: (404) 802-4600. www.atlantapublicschools.us. SAVE SCHOOL. Serving 862 students in grades 9-12, Booker T. Washington High School ranks in the top 20% of all schools in Georgia for overall test scores (math proficiency is top 20%, and reading proficiency is top 20%). The percentage of students achieving proficiency in math is <50% (which is ...

  3. Booker T. Washington High School (Rocky Mount, North Carolina). now a community center; Booker T. Washington High School (Oklahoma) Booker T. Washington High School (Columbia, South Carolina) Booker T. Washington High School (Tennessee), in Memphis, Tennessee; Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts (Dallas, Texas ...

  4. Additions: 1938, 1948, 1952, 1954, 1965, 1968. Renovation: 1988. Architect: Eugene C. Wachendorff. Booker T. Washington High School was the first black public secondary school in Atlanta. It is reflective of a period of economic growth and transition in the black community. It was in the early 1920s that new communities developed and built by ...

  5. One of the first major public high schools in the country for African-Americans when it was built in 1924, the alumni roster of Booker T. Washington High School reads like a page from Who's Who in Black America: Entertainer Nipsey Russell, performer Lena Horne, opera singer Mattiwilda Dobbs, former Georgia State Senator Leroy Johnson, former U.S. Health and Human Services Director Louis ...

  6. Additions: 1938, 1948, 1952, 1954, 1965, 1968. Renovation: 1988. Architect: Eugene C. Wachendorff. Booker T. Washington High School was the first black public secondary school in Atlanta. It is reflective of a period of economic growth and transition in the black community. It was in the early 1920s that new communities developed and built by ...

  7. In 1940, Booker T. Washington High School was invited to participate in the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools for Negroes’ Secondary School Study. Selected and funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, sixteen of the most distinguished black high schools in the United States participated in an experimental program to reexamine administrative, curricular, and instructional practices.