| Brightwood Education Campus | |
|---|---|
|   Brightwood Elementary School in 2025 | |
| Location | |
|   | |
| 1300 Nicholson Street NW [1]  , 20011 United States | |
| Coordinates | 38°57′38″N77°01′50″W / 38.96056°N 77.03056°W | 
| Information | |
| School type | Public high school | 
| Opened | 1897 (original building) [2] | 
| School district | District of Columbia Public Schools | 
| Principal | Wanda Fox [1] | 
| Grades | Pre-school to eighth [1] | 
| Enrollment | 563 (as of the 2010-2011 school year) [1] | 
| Campus type | Urban | 
| Feeder schools | Coolidge Senior High School [3] | 
| Website | brightwoodec | 
Brightwood Education Campus is a public school located in the Northwest quadrant of the District of Columbia.
The original Brightwood School was a two-story brick building [4] built around 1897 at Brightwood Avenue (now Georgia Avenue) and Peabody Street. [2] Some of the land was acquired from the Emory Chapel, and some of the land was condemned from numerous heirs of Betsy Butler. [5] Only white students were allowed to attend the school. [6] Other children attended the Military Road School nearby. [6]
Construction of an extension began in mid-1895 and completed in early 1896. [7] [8] The extension increased the size of the school to eight rooms [7] and cost $11,600. [4] The sidewalk in front of the school was paved in 1902. [9]
Two large fires, occurring simultaneously, severely damaged the school building 1912. [2] The fires were discovered at 8 p.m., and it took several hours to extinguish them. [2] Students were temporarily reassigned to nearby West School and Brightwood Park School while Brightwood School was repaired. [2] Upon inspecting the site, the fire marshal suspected arson immediately. [10] One of the fires started under the teacher's desk in Miss H. K. Berne's classroom, [10] and the fire marshal and police detectives interviewed each of the thirty students in Berne's class, but they could not determine who set the fire. [11]
 
 In 1923, the Manor Park Citizens Association passed a resolution requesting the building of a new school in the neighborhood, calling Brightwood Elementary School disgraceful and unsanitary in part because some boys had no other place to eat lunch than the lavatory. [12] Three years later, Whittier School opened for children living in Manor Park. [13] [14]
In 1925, the House Appropriations Committee budgeted $275,000 to build a new sixteen-room building to replace the original school building. [15] The plan for the new building included a gymnasium. [16] Architect Waddy B. Wood designed the school. [17] Construction bids were accepted in August 1925 [18] and a contract was awarded to the lowest bidder the following month. [19] The new 16-room school opened in September 1926. [20] The old school building was converted into a junior high school for students in grades seven and eight. [21] [22]
Further improvements to the school were made in 2003. [23]
As of 2011, 31% of the school's students meet or exceed standards in math, and 36% of its students meet or exceed standards in reading. [3] In comparison, the average for the District of Columbia Public Schools system is 42% for math and 43% for reading. [3]
The school has a science lab and a computer lab. [3]
Most students who live in Brightwood are zoned for the school. [24] As for other schools in the District of Columbia Public School system, children who live outside Brightwood Education Campus' zone may enter the Out of Boundary Lottery for a chance to attend the school. [25]