Miami park elementary: Miami Park Elementary School (Closed 2021)
Miami Park Elementary School (Closed 2021)
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School Overview
School Rankings
Source: 2020-2021 (latest school year available) National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), FL Dept. of Education
Frequently Asked Questions
What percent of students have achieved state testing proficiency in math and reading?
30-34% of students have achieved math proficiency (compared to the 59% FL state average), while 35-39% of students have achieved reading proficiency (compared to the 56% FL state average).
How many students attend Miami Park Elementary School?
299 students attend Miami Park Elementary School.
What is the racial composition of the student body?
64% of Miami Park Elementary School students are Black, and 36% of students are Hispanic.
What is the student:teacher ratio of Miami Park Elementary School?
Miami Park Elementary School has a student ration of 21:1, which is higher than the Florida state average of 16:1.
What grades does Miami Park Elementary School offer ?
Miami Park Elementary School offers enrollment in grades Prekindergarten-5
What school district is Miami Park Elementary School part of?
Miami Park Elementary School is part of Miami-Dade School District.
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Staff Directory – Coral Park Elementary
Name | Position | |
---|---|---|
DEL CASTILLO, ENRIQUE | EDelCastillo@dadeschools. net | 1st grade |
DIAZ, ARIANA | [email protected] | 1st grade |
EAST, JESSICA EILEEN | [email protected] | 1st grade – ESE |
JACKSON, ALLANA PATRICE | [email protected] | 1st grade |
MAS, JESSICA | [email protected] | 1st grade |
OHARRIZ, DORELYS BUZNEGO | [email protected] | 1st grade |
RODRIGUEZ-PADRON, YENEIR HILDA | [email protected] | 1st grade |
SILVEIRA, IRMA ANAYA | irmasilveira@dadeschools. net | 1st grade |
CAMPBELL, JENNIFER B | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
DUENAS, MARITEL | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
GONZALEZ, DIANA | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
KIROU, MARITZA E. | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
MONJE, MADELYN | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
ORGANVIDEZ, OLGA BROCHE | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
SANTIAGO, SOLEDAD | [email protected] | 2nd grade |
SEGURA, FLORBEL I | fsegura@dadeschools. net | 2nd grade – ESE |
CASANOVA, MARIA D | [email protected] | 3rd grade |
DEL RIO, ELIZABETH MARIE | [email protected] | 3rd Grade – ESE |
DIAZ, JUAN CARLOS | [email protected] | 3rd grade |
GUIDI, LIZETTE I | [email protected] | 3rd grade |
LUNA, SOLEIKA MARIA | [email protected] | 3rd grade |
MORAN, ROCIO ISABEL | [email protected] | 3rd grade |
PEREZ-VILA, JANET | JanetPerez-Vila@dadeschools. net | 3rd grade |
DIAZ, SUSANA | [email protected] | 4th grade |
FUENTES, MAYTE MARIE | [email protected] | 4th grade |
GOMEZ, FRANK | [email protected] | 4th grade |
GOMEZ, LAURA MICHELLE | [email protected] | 4th grade – ESE |
JOHNSON, MELISSA | [email protected] | 4th grade – ESE |
TELLEZ, MARICHU | [email protected] | 4th grade |
VALDES, LAZARO JESUS | [email protected] | 4th grade |
VALDES, YVONNE M | yvaldes@dadeschools. net | 4th grade |
BUSTILLO, AYNET MARIA | [email protected] | 5th grade |
CAJAMARCA BARBOSA, DIANA CAROLINA | [email protected] | 5th grade |
GARCIA, BETSY | [email protected] | 5th grade – ESE |
GONZALEZ, MICHELLE | [email protected] | 5th grade |
MEJIDO, VIVIAN GLADYS | [email protected] | 5th grade |
PENA-CASTRO, ALEXANDRA | [email protected] | 5th grade – ESE |
SURIEL, JOHANNA | jsuriel@dadeschools. net | 5th grade |
YEDO, RACHEL | [email protected] | 5th grade |
FERNANDEZ-FRAGA, ANA ROIG | [email protected] | Art Teacher |
FERNANDEZ, DAMARIS | [email protected] | Art Teacher – PT |
GARCIA, MIRIAM | [email protected] | Cafeteria Manager |
AVILA, ROSA M | [email protected] | Cafeteria Monitor |
BAEZ LANZ, GINA M | [email protected] | CSS |
FRESNEDO GARCIA, MADELIN | 322754@dadeschools. net | Custodial |
LABRADA, CARIDAD ESTHER | [email protected] | Custodial |
RIZO, ARIEL | [email protected] | Custodial – Head |
SANDIGO, SCARLETH | [email protected] | Custodial – Lead |
DEL VALLE, ANNETTE BRAVO | [email protected] | ESOL |
MARTINEZ, ANA MACIA | [email protected] | ESOL |
GONZALEZ, DESIREE | [email protected] | IND – Primary |
MACHADO, NAVILA MARIE | Navilamachado1@dadeschools. net | IND – Intermediate |
BALTODANO, DANIA JULIA | [email protected] | Kindergarten |
GARCIA, YAREMI REGLA | [email protected] | Kindergarten – ESE |
LICEA, STEFANIE | [email protected] | Kindergarten |
MENA, CARLOS GERARDO | [email protected] | Kindergarten |
MENDEZ, GISELLE AVILA | [email protected] | Kindergarten |
RODRIGUEZ, VICTORIA M | [email protected] | Kindergarten |
SUAREZ-GARCIA, ISABEL | isuarezgarcia@dadeschools. net | Kindergarten |
MEILAN, MARIE | [email protected] | Media Specialist |
RUIZ, MELISSA | [email protected] | Art Teacher – PT |
SMITH, BRIAN M | [email protected] | Music Teacher |
BERMUDEZ, MICHAELA BELLE | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
DIEPPA, IRASEMA | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
ESCOBIO, DELIA E | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
FERNANDEZ, MARIA CRISTINA | 278525@dadeschools. net | Paraprofessional |
LEYVA RIVERA, JOMILYS A | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
NORIEGA, MAYTE ISABEL | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
PLANA, GRICEL | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
QUINTANA, SILVIA GUISELLE | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
RAMOS, BERTHA | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
REOYO, MARYLIN | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
ROQUE, YOANDRA | roquey@dadeschools. net | Paraprofessional |
SOLORZANO, JESSICA CECILIA | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
URIBE, ANGELA SILVANA | [email protected] | Paraprofessional |
LOPEZ, FRANCISCO | [email protected] | PE Coach |
RAMOS, BONIFACIO JAVIER | [email protected] | PE Coach |
CABRERA, LESLIE | [email protected] | Prek |
LUIS, MELISSA MEDEROS | [email protected] | Prek – ESE |
MASFERRER, MARILYN | mmasferrer@dadeschools. net | Prek – ESE |
NEREY, JOCELYN F | [email protected] | Prek |
OVIEDO, VANESSA C | [email protected] | Prek – ESE |
RODRIGUEZ, ANAYLEEN | [email protected] | Prek |
VAZQUEZ, ANNETTE MARIE | [email protected] | Prek |
DIAZ, NAYMI | [email protected] | Reading Coach |
VIOR, MARIA DEL CARMEN | [email protected] | Registrar |
COLEBROOK, CANDICE NICOLE | [email protected] | Security – Head |
HERNANDEZ, JOSE CARLOS | 310829@dadeschools. net | Security |
COYRA, NIVIA MARIA | [email protected] | Spanish teacher |
GARCIA, YAYLIN | [email protected] | Spanish teacher |
MARTINEZ, EDDA LOURDES | [email protected] | Spanish teacher |
RODRIGUEZ, YENISLEIDYS | [email protected] | Spanish teacher |
BOLOIX, MAYRA R | [email protected] | Student Services |
VARAS, ILEANA A | [email protected] | Student Services – Counselor |
DIAZ, JUAN CARLOS | JuankyDiaz@dadeschools. net | Community School Manager |
MEDINA, DINA R | [email protected] | Community School Specialist |
LEYTE VIDAL, MARLENE | [email protected] | Principal |
FAYSON, JASHON E | [email protected] | Assistant Principal |
PEREZ-BELLON, CHRISTINA | [email protected] | Assistant Principal |
American Dream: Travel to New York and Miami
Travel
We’ve mapped out an itinerary that allows you to experience urban New York and relaxed South Miami in one trip to America. Separately, these pleasures also work, but since you are going to the USA, why not spend a few more hours on the plane and see two different cities.
New York
Everything seems to be known about New York for a long time, but every time it is able to surprise. Often captured on film, it seems to many to be the city from the movies. Latest movies and TV shows map fresh routes. The creators of “Elementary” about modern Sherlock and Watson moved them to New York. Johnny Lee Miller and Lucy Liu live in Brooklyn Heights, and in search of criminals they rush from Soho to the Bronx and use the subway. Jason Schwartzman in “Deadly Bored” plays a bohemian Brooklyn journalist who finds himself in expensive restaurants, then in the infernal outskirts of the city. Hannah and her Girlfriends have fans scouring Williamsburg for their front porches. Greta Gerwig in “Lola Vs” walks through the High Line Park.
Routes in New York have been laid a million times, but they still work. Especially if the city happens for the first time. In spring and summer, head to Central Park for magnolias and cherry blossoms, as well as joggers, couples, and old ladies with dogs. Climb the Empire State Building, whose spire was hugged by King Kong, look at the city from the 102nd floor. MoMA is still one of the best contemporary art museums. Other options on how to really spend time, look further.
Settle in with a view
In Manhattan, it’s great to live high up so you can see as far away as possible. Go to the window and say “Ah!”. From the 35th floor of the Time Warner Center, Mandarin Oriental, New York offers views of Central Park and the Hudson. Photographers shooting New York even have a special shooting point – “Central Park from the windows of the Mandarin Oriental.”
For the sake of stunning views, not only travelers, but also New Yorkers themselves come, for example, to have tea in the lobby or a cocktail in MObar. There is also the Asiate restaurant with new American cuisine, where chef Tony Robertson has brought Asian notes. Asiate serves excellent a-la-carte breakfasts. American pancakes with maple syrup, berries and whipped cream won our hearts, the classic New York bagel with smoked salmon and cream cheese, and from Asian influences, we note the Japanese breakfast with fried salmon, scrambled eggs and miso soup. The design of the hotel and the service, as usual in the hotels of the chain, are at the highest level.
High Line Walk
One of the city’s new attractions is a 1930s high-rise railroad park that starts at Meatpacking and runs all the way to Thirty-fourth Street. The railway lines have been abandoned since the 1950s, the city authorities strove to demolish them, but the residents of the area, including Diane von Furstenberg, were outraged. Now a park has appeared in place of the tracks, where plants and shrubs seem to have spontaneously sprouted through the concrete (this was approximately the case before restoration). The high-line goes between the houses at a height, so that passers-by sometimes stare at the windows, and nearby is the Hudson, in a word, a favorite place for walkers.
Hiking in the Meatpacking District
Walking the High Line can logically lead to exploring the nearest Meatpacking. The former meat-packing district has now become one of the most interesting. Shops and restaurants appeared in warehouses where bull carcasses were cut. Diane von Furstenberg was one of the first to open a DVF flagship store in a red-brick industrial building. Now new addresses have appeared at The Bond No. 9, Christian Louboutin, Kiehls, Ports 1961, Tracy Reese, Paige, Levi’s® Meatpacking, Balenciaga and many more. Work up an appetite, head to The Standard Grill, located in the hotel of the same name. New Yorkers praise him.
Soho and the new geography of American fashion
Barneys is still the best department store, and Fifth Avenue stores have not been cancelled. But try expanding your understanding of American brands. American fashion seems to be one of the most inventive, and where, if not in New York, to get acquainted with it. Take note of designers Jill Stuart, Lyn Devon, Ports 1961, Rebecca Taylor, Jenni Kayne, Trasy Reese (Michelle Obama’s favorite, by the way). Most managed to open their stores in Meatpacking and Soho. In Soho, shopping looks especially interesting due to the surroundings – low houses with cast-iron facades, architectural heritage 1920s. Both the best American and international brands are now concentrated here – John Varvatos, Alexander Wang, Anna Sui, Oliver Peoples, Fiorentini + Baker, Acne Studios, Madewell.
Try fast food
New York has managed to ingeniously change the idea of fast food, making it harmless and truly appetizing. Sandwiches with fresh ingredients eaten on a bench in the park are an example of a new American cuisine in a hurry. The classic of the genre is the legendary Katz’s Delicatessen, where sandwiches with savory cuts of beef have been cooked since 1903 years. Katz’s was filmed at Donnie Brasco, fans of the place include Al Gore, Bruce Willis and Johnny Depp. Of the new ones, we recommend the Shake Shack chain, which has already acquired an army of fans, for example, Isaac Correa likes thick milkshakes.
Miami
After New York, you immediately feel how different life is in Florida. Miami is an exuberant, southern, Cuban-influenced city where no one seems to be working and certainly not in a hurry. Before your trip, check out Miami Vice, where Don Johnson, in a white suit and Ray-Bans, zips through Ocean Drive in a Ferrari and winks at girls in neon bars. The series is not in vain called the adaptation of the Italian fashion magazine of the 80s and the anthem of the local imposingness. Almost 30 years have passed, but he gives an excellent idea of \u200b\u200bthe atmosphere. It is also clear why Gianni Versace liked Miami – his “everything is too much” as a native fell on a relaxed landscape and local love for excesses. “Margaritas” in glasses with a diameter of a plate, dogs such that passers-by turn around, and the cabriolet is certainly red.
The ocean from the windows
The ocean in Florida is turquoise, and you want to see it as often as possible. The Mandarin Oriental, Miami is located in the bay, so contemplation of the water is in order. At dawn, the sight of the houses on the opposite shore turning golden from the sun, and the ocean turning from dark blue to blue, was beautiful. Spa rooms also overlook the ocean, so you can take treatments with a view. Spa specialists work according to European, Chinese and Ayurvedic methods and deserve all praise.
Swimming Pool Mandarin Oriental, Miami
Azul is recommended for dinner, especially seafood. We had a chance to try excellent stone crab, Hawaiian tuna and rainbow trout. Curiosity about who was in charge of the menu led to a meeting with Chef Jacob Anaya. The chef said that the menu is inspired by his travels around the world. For example, Hawaii was impressed by the fact that “the islands have fantastic seafood and ways to cook it.” In 2013, Jacob’s Azul was named one of the world’s best restaurants by Forbes Travel Guide.
Rock Crab in Azul
Walking Miami Beach
Miami Beach looks like a movie set, and so it was in the case of Miami Vice and Scarface, when villas and hotels are the color of children’s crayons on Ocean Drive became filming locations. The style of urban architecture that emerged in the 1930s and 1940s is called American Art Deco, although most of all the pink, lemon and blue houses seem like a five-year-old girl’s dream come true. Topless guys and girls in bathing suits flit along the promenade. At the tables, visitors sip impressive margaritas and mojitos. From time to time cabriolets of defiant colors rush past. Across the road – the ocean and white Florida sand.
Go shopping
Most of the stores are concentrated on Lincoln Road: Victoria’s Secret, Anthropologie, BCBG Max Azria, American Apparel, Banana Republic, Madewell, J.Crew, Gap and others. Nearby there is Macys department store, however, modest. Shops on Lincoln Road are mixed with cafes. In the morning, a colorful lady with a noticeable Neapolitan mastiff comes to coffee at Starbucks, and then they walk back and forth for a long time, as if on purpose for people to watch. This is all Miami.
How to get there: Flights Moscow – New York and Moscow – Miami with a convenient connection in Zurich are operated by Swiss (www.swiss.com). We especially note the Swiss business class, which makes a long flight extremely comfortable.
Egorshina Lyudmila
Underwater park on the reef for divers
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- Nathoncharova
Underwater Park in a diving lovers
NOVEMBER 28TH, 200072 Lovers under the Local Fields of Moriami – not on the Mormans new attraction called ReefLine. It is conceived as an artificial reef and snorkeling site with many works of art with a total length of 11.2 km.
Reef Underwater Park
ReefLine will be located off the coast of Miami Beach. Construction will be led by OMA’s Shoshi Shigematsu, in collaboration with Coral Morphologic’s Ximena Kaminos, City of Miami Beach, and researchers at the University of Miami. Marine biologists and coastal engineers will also be involved.
underwater park
It will consist of concrete modular blocks that are stacked according to the topography of the seabed to serve as an artificial reef for marine life. Added to this will be a number of art installations available to snorkelers and scuba divers, including one by Shigematsu in the form of a ladder.
“OMA/Shigematsu sculpture explores the nature of weightlessness underwater,” explained a press release from the Dutch firm, which also completed construction of the bizarre convex gallery in Gwangyo earlier this year. A staircase is an elementary element of architecture, indicating direction and movement. The underwater park on the reef breaks out of its usual context and turns into an underwater frenzy.
installations
“Like the shape of an atoll, a series of winding spiral staircases create a three-dimensional structure reminiscent of marine life. The organic form provides layered areas for coral reef growth and intermediate spaces for exploration. The staircase revolves around a central forum for underwater gatherings and activities. The ReefLine staircase sculpture will be open to the public, where everyone can snorkel. 0089
reef design
The reef will feature artwork, including a work by Argentinean conceptual artist Leandro Erlich depicting an underwater traffic jam made from concrete sculptures of cars and trucks. It symbolizes emissions that contribute to climate change. Brazilian artist Ernesto Neto and Argentine artist Agustin Woodgate were also brought on board for subsequent works.
Environmentalists fear that the project could cause serious damage to existing marine life.
source
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And I want to fly! Why do stingrays jump out of the water?
Amazing creatures live in tropical and subtropical waters – mobuls.