Parkview Center School

Families living in the district, as well as in surrounding communities, choose to enroll their children at Parkview where innovation,[1] high achievement[1][2] and global education.

[4] The building is also home to the school district's Early Childhood Family Education Center, which serves children from birth to five years old.

An annual enrollment application timeline, followed by a lottery drawing every February, governs access to the School.

incorporated cultural studies (Affirming Diversity), environmental education including the School Forest (Environmental Stewardship), service learning opportunities (Service to our Community and Ownership as Responsible Citizens), and the Peace Program (Peace in our World).

The program is part of a larger Department of Education effort to identify and disseminate knowledge about best school leadership and teaching practices.

Each year since 1982, the U.S. Department of Education has sought out schools where students attain and maintain high academic goals, including those that beat the odds."

Each year since 1982, the U.S. Department of Education has sought out schools where students attain and maintain high academic goals .

[15] In 2011 Parkview Center School and their partners won a 2011 Upper Midwest Regional Emmy Award.

The video is a guide to school recycling initiated and funded by Saint Paul - Ramsey County Public Health, produced by the City of Roseville, filmed and edited by CTV North Suburbs, and starring students and staff at Roseville's Parkview Center School.

"Boxes, Bottles and Banana Peels: A Guide To School Recycling," won first place in the "Education/Schools - Program/Special/Series" category of the Regional Emmy Award competition of The Upper Midwest Chapter of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

The video offers a step-by-step guide for schools considering establishing or improving a program for recycling paper, bottles cans and food leftovers.

[21][22] Trees planted by students in 1993, led by an active team of parents, teachers, and natural resource professionals, literally transformed the landscape around the school.

Parent volunteers Pam Jakes, Jerrilyn Thompson, and Dorothy Anderson envisioned a School Forest program at Parkview[25] and part of that vision included putting the school on the web in 1994,[26] hosted by the Department of Forest Resources, GIS and Remote Sensing Laboratory and webmaster Steve Lime.