‘Exceptional’ Staten Island student honored with Michael J. Petrides award
Updated 12:17 PM;
Today 10:48 AM
Amy Mohamed, a senior at Michael J. Petrides High School, was recently honored with the Michael J. Petrides Student Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science. (Courtesy/Staten Island Borough President s office/Lifetouch National School Studies Inc.) Staten Island Borough President s officeStaten Island Borough President
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The award is named for Michael J. Petrides, a Staten Island educator who died in 1994.
Borough President James Oddo and members of the Petrides family and scholarship committee presented the award to Amy Mohamed.
The annual honor is given to a graduating high school senior who excels in math and science. Lacey DeLucia from Staten Island Technical High School was named first runner-up. Thea Akhrass from St. Joseph Hill Academy High School was named second runner-up.
Only 8 Black Students Admitted To Stuyvesant High School out of 749 Enrollments
african american college students in computer room [Image: istockphoto.com]
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In yet another sign of New York City’s failure to desegregate schools and provide educational equity in its schools, the number of Black and Latino students admitted into the city’s specialized high schools dropped to its lowest level in three years.
According to The New York Times, Only 9% of admission offers made by specialized elite high schools including Stuyvesant High School, Brooklyn Technical High School, and Bronx High School of Science went to Black and Latino students this year. A two percent drop from last year.
This story is part of a group of stories called First Person is where Chalkbeat features personal essays by educators, students, parents, and others thinking and writing about public education.
As Kamala Harris becomes the first woman, the first African American, and the first person of South Asian descent to become U.S. vice president, many girls of color will be celebrating the multiple historic barriers coming down with a single oath.
In the days leading up to the inauguration of Joe Biden and Harris, Chalkbeat spoke with Black, brown, and Asian teenagers about the significance of this moment. They discussed the importance of having elected officials who look like them, wondered why it took so long to get here, and told us how they plan to hold the new administration accountable. These young women also shared their wide-ranging policy priorities, including COVID relief, combatting climate change, increasing the minimum wage, and defunding the police.
What’s next in coronavirus-vaccination rollout on S.I.? It’s ‘quite convoluted,’ BP says
Updated Jan 07, 2021;
Posted Jan 07, 2021
Dr. Jay Nfonoyim, the video chairman of Richmond University Medical Center’s Department of Medicine, receiving his second dose of the coronavirus vaccine. (Staten Island Advance/Joseph Ostapiuk)
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STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. With the race to vaccinate hospital staff well underway, the next steps in the road to conduct coronavirus (COVID-19) immunizations across Staten Island remains a process fraught with questions and technical hurdles that could stymie the effort.
“It’s quite convoluted and we’re working layer by layer to get some clarity,” said Borough President James Oddo. “I’m not saying this is simple, but the science of creating the vaccine shouldn’t be easier in retrospect than the logistics and the people component.”