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The Anderson School PS 334

Coordinates: 40°46′51″N 73°58′38″W / 40.78082°N 73.97710°W / 40.78082; -73.97710
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PS 334 The Anderson School
Address
Map
100 West 77th Street
New York NY 10024
Information
EstablishedPS 9: 1830
The Anderson Program: 1987
Anderson Middle School: 2003
PS 334, Indep. School: 2005
LeadershipClaudia Harris, Principal IA
Nicole Chandonnet, Asst Prin.
Megan Freund, Asst Prin.
Ana Crenovich, Parent Coord.
Donna Smiley, Community Coord.
Color(s)Red & White   
MascotDragon
PublicationYearbook: The Anderson Journal
AffiliationsDistrict 3: Citywide
System: NYC DOE
Accreditation: USNY
Websitewww.ps334anderson.org
77th Street

The Anderson School PS 334 is a New York City school for children in grades kindergarten through 8 from the city's five boroughs. It was founded thirty-seven years ago (September 1987) as The Anderson Program under the stewardship of PS 9.[1] The New York City Department of Education (DOE) spun off Anderson in July 2005 as a stand-alone school — PS 334.

Enrollment

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Anderson's enrollment for the 2018–19 school year was 535 students.[2] Since inception, Anderson has had two sections (classrooms) per grade.

School names

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The Anderson School (PS 334) inherited its name from its former parent school, the Sarah Anderson School,[1] a K-5 neighborhood catchment school that offers two programs: Renaissance and Gifted and Talented. Until PS 334 moved to 100 West 77th Street in July 2009, both schools shared a building at 100 West 84th Street.

Sarah Anderson (1922–1981)[3] was a beloved school paraprofessional. The school community petitioned the Board of Education to rename PS 9 in her honor. It became official during her memorial dedication in May 1981.[4] Never married, she was the mother of three: Clarence "Pete" Anderson (1938 and living in East New York, Brooklyn), Ronald ("Ronnie") Dean Anderson (b. 1939 Griffin GA – 2001 Griffin), and Thomas Anderson. Sarah Anderson is buried at Mount Pleasant Baptist Church Cemetery, Griffin, GA. Her nickname, for those close to her, was "Peggy." Her daughter-in-law (Clarence's wife), Earnestine Anderson, also worked with Sarah as a paraprofessional at PS 9. Earnestine resides in Griffin.

In 1993, under Principal Joan Gutkin, PhD (1936–1997), PS 9 (then the host school for The Anderson Program) received magnet school funding for music and art and henceforth adopted the name, "Renaissance School of Music and Art." Ever since, PS 9 has used both names.

Physical plant

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  • Sept 1987 – July 2009, Anderson shared a building with its founding parent school P.S. 9, The Sarah Anderson School, at 100 W 84th Street.
  • July 2009 – Present, Anderson moved to a slightly older building six blocks due south at 100 W 77th Street, initially, sharing it with (i) The Computer School, (ii) JHS 44 O'Shea Middle School (a district middle school), and (iii) West Prep Academy (a district middle school). At the start of the 2010–11 school year, PS 452, a new neighborhood elementary school (3 sections per grade), moved in the building. July 2011 JHS 44 O'Shea Middle School was phased out and West Prep Academy moved to the P.S. 145 building at 150 West 105 Street. In July 2017, PS 452 moved to 210 West 61st street and the Dual Language Middle School moved in to the vacated space on the second floor of the O'Shea Complex.

Awards and achievements.

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  • In the 2023 Middle School National Championship Tournament held in Chicago, Illinois, (also known as the NAQT MSNCT) the Anderson A team tied for 5th place.[5]

See also

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References

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40°46′51″N 73°58′38″W / 40.78082°N 73.97710°W / 40.78082; -73.97710

  1. ^ a b Sarah Anderson School PS 9 official website
  2. ^ School Register, ATS (Automate the Schools), NYC Department of Education, Feb. 18, 2010
  3. ^ Sarah Anderson; born 31 July 1922 Birmingham, Alabama; died 2 February 1981 Griffin, GA
  4. ^ In May 1981, Abraham Goldman was the Principal and Richard Vasquez was the President of the P.S. 9 Parents Association.
  5. ^ "NAQT | 2023 Middle School National Championship Tournament | Team Standings". www.naqt.com. Retrieved 2024-06-11.
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