G Holmes Braddock Senior High, Miami | Fees, Rankings, Address, Admission, Vacancies, Reviews & More

G Holmes Braddock Senior High (Senior high school) is in Miami and has a 4.2 rating.

About G Holmes Braddock Senior High

G Holmes Braddock Senior High ( Senior high school ) is located at 3601 SW 147th Ave, Miami, FL 33185, United States. It is categorised as : Public high school in Miami-Dade County, Florida..
Other categories: Senior high school, Community health centre, High school, School

Ratings & Ranking

G Holmes Braddock Senior High has a rating of 4.2 and is ranked number 3145 in the US.

  • Academic Excellence:
  • School Culture & Environment:
  • Extracurricular Activities:
  • Facilities & Resources:
  • Parent & Community Engagement:

4.2/5

Overall Score

Address & Location

G Holmes Braddock Senior High is located at 3601 SW 147th Ave, Miami, FL 33185, United States.

Schools Fees

Given that it is categorised as Public high school in Miami-Dade County, Florida., the school fees for G Holmes Braddock Senior High range between 0 USD and 0 USD.

Vacancies:

No vacancies found at the moment.

Admissions:

Admissions are currently open at G Holmes Braddock Senior High.

G Holmes Braddock Senior High Proximity Zone:

The map below illustrates the average distance between G Holmes Braddock Senior High and student residential areas.

Parents & Students Reviews:

G Holmes Braddock Senior High has 61 reviews with an overall rating of 4.2. Some reviews have been edited for clarity.

Overall Rating : 4.2 out of 5.0 stars
In the 1990s, this school was rumored to have several gangs, hence drugs and violence. I cannot confirm this. However, during the mid 1990s, the school had the 2nd largest population of students in the country; only a high school in New York had more.

In early and mid 2000s, when I attended there for 4 years, the school was graded C. They changed the principal from an old man who focused mostly on sports, to the current pricipal who said the new goal would be to attain academic excellence.

However, the positive change that would eventually come took over a decade to achieve. During this time, before school budgets were severely cut after the Great Recession of 2007-2008, there were incredible opportunities available for those who wanted it. The twice-per-year theatre productions were often compared to be as great as a Broadway production. Every sport imaginable was available: beside the regular football, baseball, basketball, cheerleading, gymnastics, ballet, water polo, swimming, etc., there was also teams for archery, bowling, badminton, softball, wrestling, weight lifting, rugby, cricket, javelin, baton twirling, stomp music, synchronized flag throwing, running, bicycling, shot put, indoor and beach volleyball, and so forth.

The bad part is there was no school spirit or mobilization for motivating students to take Honors, AP, or IB classes. Only those who sought rigorous courses–to prepare for college admissions–would sign up for harder classes. Most of the school was therefore “regular” students who took the minimum classes needed to graduate and had no future plans after graduation.

I was a nerd that wanted to attend an Ivy League school so I could be surrounded by “people like me.” I focused on taking the most AP classes possible and getting straight As so I could be valedictorian and go to Harvard. I ended up taking a total of 17 AP classes, getting a 33 on the ACT, getting 800, 750, and 720 on SAT subject tests, and with my 6.4 GPA I was salutitorian in a graduating class of 1,013 students. That means being in the top 99.999%. I attended Columbia University (at the time it had the lowest acceptance rate and was ranked 4th in the country only behind the Big Three, Harvard, Yale, and Princeton.

Today, however, the school has been mostly an A, but sometimes a B school, for almost a decade. It has the Cambridge program, IB program, offers every single AP class except some of the languages. It’s magnet program is competitive and ranked high. It is clear to every student that academia is the main purpose of being in school and thats the atmosphere you feel. The slackers are there because they choose to but not because the school hasn’t pushed them hard enough.

A school doesn’t make a student…..Your raise your kids to be leaders not followers and boys should be taught to be gentlemen not macho man. Fernandez’s mother should be ashamed of herself saying that they are not criminals because she was drunk. That makes the case even worst because they should of protected her and called the cops to pick her up. They are all very aware of what they did, they should get the max penalty for this case. It is embarrassing that they committed this crime and Fernandez’s mom your son is a crude less CRIMINAL one of those that they have no heart. He has no remorse for this girl let’s see what he will say when they throw him in jail were you get proven to be a real man.
Best school I have been to. The most of the teachers and faculty are amazing at their jobs at helping the students, there is a HUGE variety of elections and classes, the NJROTC (the Navy program) is well educated and organized, and it is the REAL high school experience. I will put my kids here once they go to high school.

Note* Pinecrest Preparatory Middle High and other Pinecrest schools are HORRIBLE! Your GPA will drop down quickly.

Are you a student or parent at G Holmes Braddock Senior High? Please share your experience below: