List of Houston Independent School District schools


[Image:HoustonLamarHighSchool.JPG|thumb|Lamar High School]
[Image:WestsideHSHouston.JPG|thumb|Westside High School]
This is a list of schools operated by the Houston Independent School District.
In the district, grades kindergarten through 5 are considered to be elementary school, grades 6 through 8 are considered to be middle school, and grades 9 through 12 are considered to be senior high school. Some elementary schools go up to the sixth grade.
Every house in HISD is assigned to an elementary school, a middle school, and a high school. HISD has many alternative programs and transfer options available to students who want a specialized education and/or dislike their home schools.

Current schools

EE-12 schools

Image:THRogersSchoolHouston.JPG|thumb|T. H. Rogers School
Image:RiceSchoolhouston.JPG|thumb|The Rice School

EE-8 schools

Traditional:
Alternative:
  • Briarmeadow Charter School
  • * Named after the Briarmeadow community, it was created in 1997, with 125 students, to relieve Piney Point and three other elementary schools. Briarmeadow Charter at one time rented space at the Post Oak YMCA, with students using an area library and the cafeteria of T.H. Rogers School.
  • * It moved into a permanent facility, with the school building being former manufacturing warehouse, with room for 550 pupils, in 2001; the building had a value of $10 million, funded by the Rebuild 2002 bond, and its second floor had of space. The classrooms are in groups with a common area linking them. The building's facilities include a cafeteria equipped with a stage and designated for multiple purposes, a fine art studio with a separate entry area and an attached music studio with high-acoustic capabilities, two computer laboratories, a library, a multimedia room, a music studio, two language laboratories, and a science laboratory. Athletic fields, a nature area, and playgrounds use an outdoor area with of space. HISD had plans to use the second floor as administrative offices. It had 220 students in June 2001, increasing to 350 by September of that year.

PK-8 schools

Image:Wharton K8 Houston 01.jpg|thumb|Wharton Dual Language Academy
  • Baker Montessori School
  • * Serves sections of Neartown, including parts of Montrose
  • Garden Oaks K-8 School
  • *Serves most of Garden Oaks and a section of Oak Forest
  • Thomas J. Pilgrim Academy
  • *The school was built in 1957, on the sesquicentennial of the birth of Thomas J. Pilgrim, and opened as Thomas J. Pilgrim Elementary School. In 2006 it began adding middle school grades, and in 2007 it changed its name to its current one and moved into its current location. Principal Alma Salman arranged to have middle school grades added so the school could have more time to increase student performance so it meets their grade levels. As of 2011 85% of the students at Pilgrim are low income, and about 66% of students who are new to Pilgrim have limited proficiency of English, with Spanish and Arabic being the most common native languages. As of 2011 250 students are in grades 6–8. In 2011 Children at Risk ranked the Pilgrim middle school as the best comprehensive middle school program in Houston.
  • Wharton Dual Language Academy
  • * Serves sections of Neartown, including parts of Montrose
Carter G. Woodson K-8 Center in Houston formerly had PK-8; since 2018 is now has PK-5. Middle school students were rezoned to Albert Thomas Middle. Ericka Mellon of the Houston Chronicle stated in 2015 that Woodson K-8 "performs well below the district average" although most Texas accountability test scores for the school increased during the period 2013–2014. In 2015 Children at Risk ranked Woodson K-8 an "F".

K-8 schools

Secondary schools

6-12 schools

All high schools are in the city of Houston unless otherwise noted.
All schools are in the city of Houston unless otherwise noted.
Image:ChallengeEarlyCollegeHouston.JPG|thumb|Challenge Early College High School
UIL ranking
The Carter G. Woodson School formerly had middle school levels, later became PK-8, and now is PK-5. Notable alumni of the middle school:

Early childhood centers

  • Ashford Early Childhood Center
  • Bellfort Early Childhood Center
  • David "Davy" Crockett Early Childhood Center
  • Early Childhood Center
  • Fonwood Early Childhood Center
  • * Originally Fonwood Elementary School of the North Forest Independent School District, it was built in 1964. Prior to NFISD's closure, the district had been planning to close Fonwood Elementary. HISD converted Fonwood into the area's early childhood center after the takeover effective July 1, 2013. It was one of the older schools of NFISD. HISD released statements highlighting the poor condition of Fonwood Elementary when doing a post-takeover tour of the school. In a tour of the campus in July 2013, Terry Grier noted a playground in poor condition, water fountains too tall for children, exposed wires, violins without strings stored in the music room, and a restroom which had a bad odor. The teacher's lounge had a plush couch, upholstered chairs, flowers, and a flatscreen television. HISD did not state that NFISD was planning to close Fonwood. It became an early childhood center when NFISD merged into HISD on July 1, 2013.
  • Sharon Goldstein Halpin Early Childhood Center
  • Martin Luther King Jr. Early Childhood Center
  • Ninfa Laurenzo Early Childhood Center
  • Gabriela Mistral Early Childhood Center

Interagency alternative schools

  • Beechnut Academy Southeast
  • Beechnut Academy Southwest

Online learning

HISD has an online high school offering regular, AP, and credit-recovery courses at its virtual school. For grades 3-12 offers online schooling through Texas Connections Academy @ Houston, which is operated under contract by Connections Academy, a Maryland-based company which works with public and other schools to provide online education.

Defunct schools

Former K-12 schools

Former secondary schools

  • New Aspirations Charter School

Former 7-12 schools

Former high schools

Zoned
Alternative
  • DeVry Advantage Academy
  • Foley's Academy
  • *Foley's Academy was an alternative high school where students advanced at their own pace. It had one-on-one learning and catered to at-risk students to prevent them from dropping out. Former first lady Barbara Bush and Dr. Joan Raymond headed the opening ceremony by signing in the first three students: Twanna Lynn, Shannon Gladney and Robert Martinez.
  • New Aspirations Academy High School
  • Ninth Grade Academy
  • Middle College For Technology Careers
  • Houston Drop Back In Academy - Closed
High school programs formerly affiliated

Former K-8 and 1-8 schools

Alternative:
  • Kandy Stripe Academy - Closed in 2018 prior to the fall semester

Former middle schools

Former zoned schools
  • Lockett Junior High School
  • Longfellow Junior High School
  • Miller Junior High School
  • James D. Ryan Middle School - Closed in 2013, building now used for The Medical and Health Professions Academy at Ryan Middle School
  • Terrell Middle School - As of 2014 it serves as an immigration detention center for children
  • * In 1996 its students had disciplinary records that caused them to be expelled from their previous schools. Circa 1996 the annual cost per student incurred by each student was over $16,000; around that time the average per-student cost in Houston-area school districts was $4,000-$5,000.
Other schools
  • Kaleidoscope Middle School - combined into Long Middle in 2012

Former early childhood centers

2 in Houston
  • Concord Early Childhood Center
  • *Concord, located on the site of Kashmere Gardens Elementary School, closed due to low enrollment. The students will be a part of the Kashmere Gardens population.
  • Langston Early Childhood Center
  • Las Américas Early Childhood Development Center
  • *Originally the preschool was located in the clubhouse of the aforementioned apartment complex. It later received its own building, which had three stories.
  • Wheatley Child Development

Former alternative centers

  • The Harris County Youth Village in far southern Pasadena, west of Seabrook, opened in 1972. The center was no longer affiliated with HISD in 1997.