Austin College and Career Academy High School (formerly known as Austin Polytech High School, commonly known as Austin High School)[4] is a public four-year high school located in the Austin neighborhood in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Operated by the Chicago Public Schools, Austin opened in 1876[5] and was named in honor of Henry W. Austin, a Chicago real estate developer.[6]
Austin shared its campus with two smaller schools; Austin Business & Entrepreneurship Academy High and V.O.I.S.E. Academy High School. After the 2015–2016 school year, the small schools converted into one school and was renamed Austin College and Career Academy High School.[7]
Austin was opened by the Chicago Public Schools district in 1876.[5] During the mid-twentieth century, Austin High was considered one of the best high schools in the Chicago area.[8] In 2004, the online newsletter Chicago-Catalyst.org called the school "A yellow brick fortress".
In later years, however, Austin suffered from low test scores, low attendance, and student violence. During the 2003–2004 school year, The Chicago Public Schools began phasing the school out, ordering the school to stop admitting new freshmen students.[9] The last graduations were held in June 2007 and the phase-out was completed by the end of summer, 2007.[10][11] Many of the old school records from 1890 to 1970 were moved to the Chicago Public Library's Special Collections for Community History for preservation after the original closing of the school in 2007.
As part of the Renaissance 2010 program, the school's campus was then converted into three smaller high schools:
Austin Polytechnical Academy, which opened in 2007,[12]
Austin Business and Entrepreneurship Academy, which opened in 2006,
V.O.I.S.E. Academy High School, which opened in 2008. (VOISE stands for "Virtual Opportunities Inside a School Environment"; the school combines an online curriculum with classroom instruction.)[13] The schools on the Austin campus share an athletics program. The sports teams are nicknamed the Tigers.[14]
After the 2015–2016 school year, Chicago Public Schools decided to close the small schools and merge them back into one school, naming the new school Austin College and Career Academy High School.
Austin College and Career Academy is rated a 1 out of 10 by GreatSchools.org, a national school quality information site. [15] GreatSchools’ Summary Rating is based on four of the school’s themed ratings: the Test Score Rating, Student or Academic Progress Rating, College Readiness Rating, and Equity Rating and flags for discipline and attendance disparities at a school.
The Team had been on the channel four news for being undefeated statewide and became the statewide champions of the Illinois chess teams which also brought media attention in other aspects which include the Austin Weekly and Chicago Tribune. Mr. Lee was undefeated the entire season and was noted as breaking records and making history for the Austin Community Academy High School as there hadn't been a chess team since the early 1980s. The coach, Richard Dunbar was a detective for the Chicago Police Department who cared entirely about the community and local youth. Abraham Lee is listed in the United States Chess Federation.[19]
This template should only include schools controlled by and/or affiliated with CPS. If a charter school is still in operation but no longer affiliated with CPS, list as a former school.