Celebrating DSST's Class of 2022
Last week DSST celebrated six graduations: DSST: Byers, DSST: Green Valley Ranch, DSST: Montview,...
Last week DSST celebrated six graduations: DSST: Byers, DSST: Green Valley Ranch, DSST: Montview,...
On June 3, the DPS Board of Education will select a new representative forDistrict 5 (Northwest...
Dear DSST Team, As we close out the year, we want to invite you to share your reflections on this...
DSST admits students through a weighted lottery to guarantee a diverse student body. Enrollment is...
Ash Galaviz, 17, walked into the lunchroom at DSST: Green Valley Ranch High School one recent...
Beginning in fall 2023, most DPS schools will have new bell times that align with the Board of...
Denver Public Schools has one electric school bus, solar panels in 46 locations, and 126 school and...
Hundreds of high school seniors in Denver are celebrating their future with Senior Signing Day....
Simulated blood oozed out of a mock wound as eighth-grade science students worked quickly to “stop...
UCHealth and Aurora Science and Tech are partnering up to offer an opportunity for students to...
Last week DSST celebrated six graduations: DSST: Byers, DSST: Green Valley Ranch, DSST: Montview, DSST: Conservatory Green, DSST: College View and DSST: Cole. Check out some of the highlights below.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
On June 3, the DPS Board of Education will select a new representative for District 5 (Northwest Denver) in Denver Public Schools. The DPS Board of Education is interviewing applicants and accepting public comments. Read more about each of the applicants here, including our own Managing Director Adeel Khan.
Because the current District 5 representative, Brad Laurvick resigned due to a job relocation, his replacement will be selected directly by the school board, instead of through an election process. On May 26, the school board interviewed all five candidates. This meeting was closed to the public but was available to view via live stream.
The school board is a group of seven members from the community who are elected into office by Denver voters. Their duties include:
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
Dear DSST Team,
As we close out the year, we want to invite you to share your reflections on this year as well as your hopes for the future of DSST through our End of Year Survey and our Strategic Planning Open Forum.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
DSST admits students through a weighted lottery to guarantee a diverse student body. Enrollment is as high as 80 percent students of color at some campuses, with an equal balance of young men and women.
It’s a rigorous academic program, but that doesn’t change the fact that the students are still just kids. Between classes or heading to lunch, they linger to talk with friends, they laugh and joke, they sneak away to use their phones, they study.
You see Afros, long hair, short hair, multi-colored hair. Some wear hijabs, others ballcaps. They’re kids. College-bound kids who, for the time being, have found their happy place.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
Ash Galaviz, 17, walked into the lunchroom at DSST: Green Valley Ranch High School one recent afternoon, and a bunch of friends were excited. A senior who loves an afterschool nap and watching anime, Ash is working on a book that will soon be self-published.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
Beginning in fall 2023, most DPS schools will have new bell times that align with the Board of Education's Healthy Start Times (HST) resolution. The resolution calls for middle schools and high schools to start no earlier than 8:20 a.m. each school day to support healthy sleep habits in adolescents. DPS will include information about the new bell times in this week’s Our DPS Voice newsletter.
What this means for DSST families
DSST is still determining bell time decisions for some schools. You can see your school’s new bell schedule, as assigned by DPS here. In the bell time chart, TBD signifies DSST will be able to set times because these schools are on DPS Success Express shuttle system or get transportation from a third party. We don’t expect to finalize these TBD times until next school year but we are planning to keep all high schedules aligned, starting at 8:20 a.m. to continue our cross-campus course offerings. We know these changes may create challenges for your family, and we are committed to supporting your needs and addressing concerns new start times may bring.
As a reminder, these new times will not be put into effect until the 2023-24 school year (not this fall). As with any change that impacts our program, will be very intentional over the next year to explore all options that support our communities with the new times.
Thank you in advance for your time and patience as we make these changes and move toward implementing Healthy Start Times beginning in August 2023.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
Denver Public Schools has one electric school bus, solar panels in 46 locations, and 126 school and community gardens. But students are pushing the district to do more and become a national leader on climate action, sustainability, and environmental justice.
“I really want to ensure a livable future for me and my generation,” Amelia Fernández Rodríguez, a freshman at DSST: Conservatory Green high school, recently told the school board. She is a member of a group called DPS Students for Climate Action.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
Hundreds of high school seniors in Denver are celebrating their future with Senior Signing Day. They gathered at the Denver Coliseum for DSST’s annual Senior Signing Day.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
Simulated blood oozed out of a mock wound as eighth-grade science students worked quickly to “stop the bleed” in a new lab at Aurora Science & Tech.
Their medical instructors taught the eighth-graders that in order to stop a real wound from bleeding, the tourniquet would have to be painfully tight. The practice tourniquets did hurt. But in that moment, Jackie Morales, 14, had a great vision of her future.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events
UCHealth and Aurora Science and Tech are partnering up to offer an opportunity for students to learn what a career in the field of medicine would look and feel like, with hands-on coursework in medicine at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.
They used Kool-Aid instead of blood and it was a classroom instead of an operating room. But it was a way of getting kids interested to work in the field of medicine.
Topics: News, Updates, & Events