place

The Anderson School PS 334

1987 establishments in New York CityEducational institutions established in 1987Gifted educationMagnet schools in New York (state)Public elementary schools in Manhattan
Public middle schools in Manhattan
Anderson School 77St 2020 jeh
Anderson School 77St 2020 jeh

The Anderson School PS 334 is a New York City school for children in grades kindergarten through 8 from the city's five boroughs. It was founded thirty-four years ago (September 1987) as The Anderson Program under the stewardship of PS 9. The New York City Department of Education (DOE) spun off Anderson in July 2005 as a stand-alone school — PS 334.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Anderson School PS 334 (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Anderson School PS 334
West 77th Street, New York Manhattan

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: The Anderson School PS 334Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.78082 ° E -73.9771 °
placeShow on map

Address

Middle School 44

West 77th Street 100
10024 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Anderson School 77St 2020 jeh
Anderson School 77St 2020 jeh
Share experience

Nearby Places

Nobel Monument

The Nobel Monument is an obelisk in honor of U.S. Nobel laureates, located just northwest of the American Museum of Natural History in Theodore Roosevelt Park in Manhattan (New York City), with the names of U.S. laureates of the Nobel Prize engraved on its western, southern, and eastern sides, and the name and image of Alfred Nobel on the north side. It is the only monument in a New York City park which bears the names of living people.The west side of the monument lists Nobel laureates up to 1979, the south side continues the list through 2010, and the east side lists the laureates starting in 2011 (as can be seen in the photos in the gallery of images below, although the website of the New York City Department of Parks incorrectly states that the south side lists the names from 1980 to the present). The monument lists only those laureates who were U.S. citizens when they won the Nobel, so it includes naturalized immigrants such as Isaac Bashevis Singer and Roald Hoffman but has neither U.S. native T. S. Eliot, who was a naturalized British subject, nor Albert Einstein, who only became a U.S. citizen years after winning. In addition to individuals it also names the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), a Quaker organization based in the US, which won the Nobel Peace Prize (the only Nobel that groups as well as individuals can win) in 1947; the AFSC's name can be seen in the photograph below of the west side of the monument.