Al-Ghazaly High School

Al-Ghazaly Junior/Senior High School
Address
Al-Ghazaly Junior/Senior High School
Al-Ghazaly Junior/Senior High School
970 Black Oak Ridge Road
Wayne, (Passaic County), NJ 07470
United States
Coordinates 40°58′24″N 74°16′21″W / 40.973197°N 74.272435°W / 40.973197; -74.272435Coordinates: 40°58′24″N 74°16′21″W / 40.973197°N 74.272435°W / 40.973197; -74.272435
Information
Type Private, Coeducational
Motto Never Give Up
Religious affiliation(s) Islam
Established 1984
Oversight Islamic Education Fund of New Jersey
School code 310594
Principal Sr. Khaldiya Mustafa
Faculty 25.8 FTEs[1]
Grades 712
Enrollment 345 (as of 2015-16)[1]
Average class size 30
Student to teacher ratio 13.4:1[1]
Classes offered AP Biology, AP Physics B, AP Calculus (AB and BC), AP Chemistry, AP Statistics, AP English Literature, AP World History, AP US History
Team name Warriors
Newspaper SNAP
School fees $150 Book fees
Tuition $635 each

Al-Ghazaly High School in Wayne, in Passaic County, New Jersey, is one of the oldest Islamic high schools in the United States. The school was founded in 1984, and serves students in seventh through twelfth grades. The principal is Sr. Khaldiya Mustafa. The schools states their mission of the school is to mold its students into productive Islamic members of the community around and abroad. Most students at Al-Ghazaly High School come from Al-Ghazaly and Al Hikmah Elementary School, located at Communipaw Avenue in Jersey City and North 8th Street in Prospect Park, respectively.

As of the 2015-16 school year, the school had an enrollment of 345 students and 25.8 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 13.4:1. The school's student body was 75.9% White, 22.9% Asian and 1.2% Black.[1]

Al-Ghazaly's dress code has remained the same for many years to in order to show equality between students. Boys wear navy blue pants and white polo shirts while girls wear long navy blue Islamic dresses often referred to as "abaya" or "jilbab" and white headscarves.

History

Between 1984 and 2013, Al-Ghazaly was located on 441 North Street in Teaneck, New Jersey. The new facility in Wayne (formerly Neumann Preparatory School and Lake View Learning Center) opened its doors to students in September 2013, with the Teaneck facility repurposed to serve students in pre-Kindergarten through third grade.[2]

Curriculum

The students at Al-Ghazaly study standard subjects, such as Math (from Algebra to Calculus), English, Science, History, and many more. Additionally, the school includes Arabic, Quran (memorization of the holy book), Tafsir (analyzing/finding deep meaning to Quran), and Islamic Studies as part of the curriculum. In Islamic studies, the students learn all the morals and teachings of Islam, Sunna and Shariah. With the aim of preparing students for college success, Al-Ghazaly adds much rigor to each of the courses offered, thus having a reputation for its challenging curriculum.

The students pray Zuhr together everyday, and on Fridays, they have a Khateeb (imam) preach to them, after which they pray Jumu'ah.

Extracurricular activities

Al Ghazaly offers Forensics, Model UN, Beta Club, Art Club, Mock Trial, Model Congress, Science Olympiad, Math League, and many other extracurriculars. Students partake in random acts of kindness. Ghazaly's basketball team is the Ghazaly Warriors.

With the opening of the new school building, new sports team are being founded by the students, including a boys and girls soccer team and a flag football team.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 School data for Al-Ghazaly Jr./Sr. High School, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed October 20, 2017.
  2. Burrow, Megan. "Al-Ghazaly Elementary School in Teaneck readies for opening", Teaneck Suburbanite, August 29, 2013. Accessed October 3, 2013. "Iman El-Dessouky, a board member at Al-Ghazaly School, said the change was precipitated when the school secured a bigger building for its high school students in Wayne.... Originally, El-Dessouky said, the school planned to use the Teaneck campus for pre-kindergarten through first grade students, but after the school held an open house for parents and prospective students earlier this month, the board decided to expand its offerings up to third grade."
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