McFatter Technical College and Technical High School

McFatter Technical College and Technical High School
Address
6500 Nova Drive
Davie, Florida 33317
United States
Coordinates 26°05′07″N 80°13′53″W / 26.08529°N 80.2313°W / 26.08529; -80.2313Coordinates: 26°05′07″N 80°13′53″W / 26.08529°N 80.2313°W / 26.08529; -80.2313
Information
Type Adult College and High School
Motto Rigor + Relationships + Relevance = Success
School district Broward County Public Schools
Principal Jeanette Johnson
Grades 9-12, Adults
Enrollment 554 high school
Campus Suburban
Color(s)           Silver & Navy
Website Official Site

William T. McFatter Technical College is an adult technical college that also includes a magnet high school located in Davie, Florida. The college is a part of the Broward County Public Schools district.

Adults at the college number close to 1000. The magnet high school tries to maintain an average of 600 pupils in the school at one time, about 150 students per grade. These students are picked out of a lottery after they have met the requirements to get in to the school. Certain requirements include a GPA of at least 2.5 and an FCAT score of a Level 3 or higher. McFatter has an FCAT school grade of "A" for the 2009-2010 academic year.[1]

History

The school began as a Vocational center for adults, later expanding to combine a full school high school magnet program focusing on college preparation and vocational training. In 2002 the school was honored as Florida's model high school. It was also named a New Millennium High School, being only one of twenty in the state of Florida. The School Board of Broward County has rated the school as an "A" for the last six years. The whole high school program has been running in a total of 14 years, and is located near Broward College and Alvin T. Sherman Library. Recently the school has won the Blue Ribbon Award. The Blue Ribbon Schools Program honors public and private schools based on one of two criteria: 1) Schools whose students, regardless of background, achieve in the top 10 percent of their state on state tests or in the case of private schools in the top 10 percent of the nation on nationally-normed tests; and 2) Schools with at least 40 percent of their students from disadvantaged backgrounds that demonstrate dramatic improvement of student performance to high levels on state tests or nationally-normed tests. As of June 2014, the name of the school changed to McFatter Technical College and Technical High School.

Operation

Adults take either a daily 5 or 6 hour hands-on technical program which gives them training to enter the workforce. They are taught by professionals in their respective fields. In the high school, for their freshman and sophomore years, students are required to take a "Tech Studies" course, in which they explore the aspects of all the technical programs that the college has to offer. With the end of their sophomore year, students are required to choose their technical program for the rest of their high school years. All students take honor classes or classes on higher levels, and some takes Advanced Placement courses. Adult hours range between 7:45 AM and 2:30 PM with some evening classes as well. The high school operates from 9:15 AM to 4:10 P.M. Students that use school buses as transportation home must take a shuttle bus to Nova High School, where they then get on their buses. There are clubs and organizations for students to participate in, including...

High School

There is currently only one high school building. Because the campus does not have any sports teams, Physical Education and Health Management classes are required to be taken as a freshman and sophomore. The school symbol is a Storm, represented by a storm design. The first high school class to graduate from McFatter was in 2002. The class of 2008 had $1.6 million in scholarships.

High School demographics

As of September 2012, the total high school student enrollment was 620. The ethnic makeup of the school was 32% White, 17% Black, 43% Hispanic, 5% Asian or Pacific Islander, 2% Multiracial, and 0% Native American or Native Alaskan.[2]

Technical courses offered

Automotive Services Technology [3]
Boat and Yacht Repair
Drafting
Welding
Marine Services Technology
Culinary Arts [4]
Commercial Photography
Graphic Arts & Printing
New Media Technology
Television Production
Network Support Services [5]
Computer Programming
Medical Assisting
Practical Nursing
Dental Laboratory Technology
Optometric Assisting
Pharmacy Technology

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.