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Central High School (Kansas City, Missouri)

Coordinates:39°04′01″N94°32′31″W / 39.067°N 94.542°W /39.067; -94.542
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromCentral Academy of Excellence)

Public secondary school in Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Central High School
Location
Map
3221 Indiana Avenue

,
United States
Information
TypePublic secondary
Established1867
School districtKCMSD/KCPS
PrincipalAnthony Holland, Jr.
Teaching staff41.68 (on anFTE basis)[1]
Grades9–12
Enrollment534 (2023-2024)[1]
Student to teacher ratio12.81[1]
ColorsBlue and White  
Athletics conferenceInterscholastic League
NicknameBlue Eagles
YearbookThe Centralian
Websitewww.kcpublicschools.org/central

Central High School is ahigh school located at 3221 Indiana Avenue inKansas City,Missouri. It is part of theKansas City Public Schools.[2] Central was established in 1867 in order to help educate the growing population of Kansas City. Formally located indowntown Kansas City, Missouri on 11th and Locust St, Central moved to its current location in 1912. The school colors are blue and white and the school's athletic teams are referred to as the "Eagles". Central has an enrollment of approximately 500 students annually.

School background

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The high school is located in west ofCentral Middle School building at the corner ofLinwood Boulevard and Indiana Avenue. It features a large, one-acre squarefield house, Greek-style theatre, and an Olympic-sized swimming pool with one- and three- meter diving boards.

Central High School was also part of the now defunct magnet program which was a response to a court-mandated, forced desegregation plan that was designed to try and lure students from the suburbs with targeted programs.[3] As part of this effort, Central High School was rebuilt and renamed to Central Computers Unlimited / Classical Greek Magnet High School.[4]

The two magnet themes were not complementary to each other and most of the money spent on the new facility went to the Classical Greek theme for sports-related facilities like a fully outfitted weight room (inspired by the weight room of the Kansas City Chiefs), two indoor racquetball courts, a field house, a fully equipped gymnastics training facility, and an Olympic-sized swimming pool.

The Computers Unlimited theme brought with it a fully networked classroom environment with computers in most classrooms and a Novell NetWare v3.11 network. There was also a small robotics lab; a video, photography, and graphics lab; and a CAD lab. The cost to taxpayers for the new facility was over $32 million. It was completed in 1991. Unfortunately, the new facilities and programs were not enough to bring in and retain suburban students in this and other magnet program schools. The program was an abject failure by any measure and was abandoned. The references to the magnet themes were removed from the school's name, and it was returned to a normal curriculum.

Name change

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In July 2012, KCPS unanimously approved the proposal to change the school's name from Central High School to Central Academy of Excellence. The name change officially went into effect for the 2012-2013 school year.[5] The proposal had been heavily promoted by the school's former principal Linda Collins, who strives "to put a new name on what the principal hopes will be a transformed school on the inside." There are also hopes for getting more technology into the classrooms and instilling stronger discipline. Central High School became the official name after the KCPS Board of Directors unanimously approved the change in 2019.

Notable alumni

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This list of alumnimay not follow Wikipedia'sverifiability policy. Please helpimprove it by addingreliable sources for existing names which prove they are alumni. Unsourced names may be challenged and removed.(June 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

References

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  1. ^abc"CENTRAL ACADEMY OF EXCELLENCE". National Center for Education Statistics. RetrievedApril 3, 2025.
  2. ^"Achievement First". Archived fromthe original on December 19, 2008. RetrievedDecember 7, 2008.
  3. ^"Central High School".Central Kansas City.
  4. ^"Central High School".U.S. News.
  5. ^Robertson, Joe."KC's Central High School renamed". KC Star. Archived fromthe original on July 29, 2012. RetrievedJuly 30, 2012.
  6. ^"not found".kchistory.org. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.
  7. ^SWE (March 13, 2008)."Irene Peden".Engineering Pioneers. Society of Women Engineers. Archived fromthe original on September 25, 2015. RetrievedOctober 29, 2015.
  8. ^Peden, Irene (March 2, 2002)."SWE Pioneers"(PDF).Society of Women Engineers (Interview). Interviewed by Kata, Lauren. p. 6. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on February 24, 2016. RetrievedOctober 29, 2015.
  9. ^Humanities, National Endowment for the (July 4, 1897)."Kansas City journal. [volume] (Kansas City, Mo.) 1897-1928, July 04, 1897, Image 3". p. 3.ISSN 2157-3492. RetrievedJune 7, 2025.

External links

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39°04′01″N94°32′31″W / 39.067°N 94.542°W /39.067; -94.542

High schools inKansas City, Missouri
This list is incomplete and may not be fully accurate.
Italicized schools are not in KCMO proper but have the city in their attendance boundaries.
Zoned schools
Magnet schools
Public schools not in KCPS
Center School District
Hickman Mills C-1 School District
Independence Public School District
North Kansas City School District
Park Hill School District
Platte County School District Number 3
Independently-operated high schools
Catholic
Secular
International
National
Geographic
Other
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