Austin American-Statesman

Manor's 2-campus high school makes room for more students

- By Melissa B. Taboada mtaboada@statesman.com

There is no stopping the growth in Manor, one of the more afford

able suburbs of Austin. But the school district is now putting its final touches on a new secondary school building that officials say will make room for more students without losing a close-knit feel.

The district’s plan is for the new campus, Manor Senior High School, to be the home base for juniors and seniors, leaving the old Manor High School primarily for freshmen and sophomores.

The two-campus high school is also an attempt to better engage students and give them more ownership of their studies. Like

other recently constructe­d high schools, the new Manor Senior High has the look and feel of a small college campus: open and collaborat­ive work spaces, large windows and natural light, and charging stations for cellphones and laptops.

Similar in shape to a boomerang, constructi­on is nearly complete on the 215,000-square-foot, 1,200-student-capacity school that will initially open with 900 juniors and seniors in August. The $48 million campus is being built with 2014 bond money, initially earmarked for renovation­s to the

original Manor High School. Instead, the district put that money toward new space to keep the high school a more manageable size while the number of students continues to climb.

“Splitting those students out in the smaller learning environmen­ts, I think we’re going to see a better return on investment,” said Superinten­dent Royce Avery, who took the helm in 2016. “When teachers have more opportunit­y to engage smaller groups of kids, it has a more profound effect of what kids are giving them and what they are giving the kids.”

Where a house is still $200,000

The 9,100-student Manor school district is expected to grow by an additional 2,600 students in the next five years, and add nearly 5,700 more over the next decade, according to demographe­r projection­s. Manor is one of the few remaining areas of Central Texas with affordable housing, with an average home market value of $195,177 in 2017.

“It’s one of the last few places close in (to Austin) where you can afford that American dream,” said developer Pete Dwyer, who began building in Manor 17 years ago.

Dwyer said the area is quickly drawing millennial­s and young families with school-age children who hear about the district’s high-tech campuses, including Manor New Tech High School, which was visited by President Barack Obama in 2014, as well as newer elementary schools and a middle school with the same focus.

New home constructi­on is accelerati­ng, Dwyer said: “It’s growth like I’ve never seen before.”

The Manor Senior High campus is in the far northeast portion of the district, bounded by some nearby farms and undevelope­d land. The school site already houses the Manor Athletic Complex, which cut the cost of building the campus since utilities already were in place.

The original Manor High, which received its own improvemen­ts, already is at capacity, with 1,762 students.

The new Manor Senior High campus largely will offer upperclass­men their core classes. But upperclass­men who are taking career and technical education courses at the original Manor High campus, as well as Manor High students taking advanced level courses or who are on varsity athletics, will be bused back and forth between the two schools. It is 4 miles from one campus to another. At least one bus will ferry students between periods, and district officials said the buses can make the trek during the 10-minute period between classes so students won’t miss anything.

Other Texas school districts, including Plano and Southlake Carroll, have opened two-campus high schools. A few other Central Texas suburbs, such as Lake Travis, have been reluctant to open a second main high school and have embraced similar concepts like placing an annex on the same property to accommodat­e more students.

Graduation rate goals

The Manor Senior High campus will have beefed up career and technology work spaces. In the cosmetolog­y department, for example, there will be a waiting room for community members signed up to get student haircuts, pedicures and facials. Students in the veterinari­an medical program, under supervisio­n, will work with animals and provide wellness checkups for pets brought in by community members.

The school will feature a makerspace, with some hardbound books like a traditiona­l library, but also collaborat­ive workspaces and high-tech tools like a 3-D printer; a technology room where students can borrow Chromebook­s or iPads; small conference rooms similar to those found in college libraries; a commercial kitchen with the feel of a bistro for culinary arts students; and a student-run coffee bar.

The campus also will offer more advanced and dual credit courses, and it will have a mock courtroom that includes a judge and jury box for students in law and public service programs.

“My vision as principal is to always give students an experience of learning that they enjoy, moving away from our industrial focus of ‘you’re learning what we’re telling you to learn’ and instead, kids enjoying what their learning and owning their learning,” Principal Debra Aceves said.

Aceves said she hopes the focus on the smaller, student-centered environmen­t, with upperclass­men in one location, will also help boost the high school’s fouryear federal graduation rate, which was about 93 percent in 2016, and ensure every student graduates.

“It might not happen in the first year, but that’s definitely in a two- to three-year plan that we hit a 100 percent graduation rate,” Aceves said. “The focus on 11th- and 12th-graders starting off at about 900 will definitely make that a doable goal.”

 ?? JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? A makerspace in Manor Senior High School, with a traditiona­l library as well as collaborat­ive workspaces and high-tech tools, overlooks what will be the school cafeteria.
JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN A makerspace in Manor Senior High School, with a traditiona­l library as well as collaborat­ive workspaces and high-tech tools, overlooks what will be the school cafeteria.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Manor Senior High School will be the home base for juniors and seniors.
PHOTOS BY JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Manor Senior High School will be the home base for juniors and seniors.
 ??  ?? Constructi­on is nearly complete on the 215,000-square-foot, 1,200-student-capacity school that will initially open with 900 juniors and seniors in August.
Constructi­on is nearly complete on the 215,000-square-foot, 1,200-student-capacity school that will initially open with 900 juniors and seniors in August.

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