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==Students==
Students who enroll must be considered at risk academically for an array of reasons.<ref>{{cite news|last=Rather|first=John|title=If You're Thinking of Living In/Great Neck; Great Site for Schools, Parks and Trains |pages=|publisher=The New York Times|date=2002-09-08|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A03EFDF153EF93BA3575AC0A9649C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=3|accessdate=2012-08-15}}</ref> The students must be in danger of getting lost in Great Neck’s two large, comprehensive high schools or becoming overwhelmed by their large high schools.<ref name=Thefutureofhighschool>{{cite news|last=Vail|first=Kathleen|title=The future of high school |pages=|publisher=|date=2007-08-31|url=http://schoolboardnews.nsba.org/2007/08/the-future-of-high-school/|accessdate=2012-08-15}}</ref> Students may have social and emotional problems.<ref name=Thefutureofhighschool/> The students may also face anxiety and difficulties with focus and organization.<ref name=Thefutureofhighschool/> In the Village School’s low-key approach, these issues can be dealt with easily.<ref name=Thefutureofhighschool/> Students who may have felt lost and isolated in a large school often thrive in the smaller and more personalized setting of the Village School.<ref name=VILLAGESCHOOL/> In the 2010-2011 school year, 39 students attended Village School.<ref name=EnrollmentandDemographicFactors/> However, Village School can enroll up to 50 students.<ref>, accessed August 15, 2012</ref> About fifty percent of students qualify for special education.<ref name="villageref2"/>

==Demographics==
The student body in the school year of 2010-2011 consists of:<ref name=EnrollmentandDemographicFactors/>
* 0 American Indian or Alaska Native students or 0% of the student body
* 2 Black or African American students or 5% of the student body
* 4 Hispanic or Latino students or 10% of the student body
* 5 Asian or Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander students or 13% of the student body
* 28 White students or 72% of the student body
* 0 Multiracial students or 0% of the student body

== Notable alumni ==
*], actress; transferred to the school in her sophomore year.<ref>Fischler, Marcelle S. , '']'', July 8, 2007. Accessed July 11, 2007. "In her sophomore year, unable to find her niche, she switched from the John L. Miller-Great Neck North High School to the Village School, the district’s alternative high school, with 50 students. After class, she joined the theater program at the William A. Shine Great Neck South High School..."</ref>
* Jesse Friedman, who with his father Arnold was the subject of the child-molestation case documented in '']''.<ref>"An Uphill Fight to Shed a Lifelong Label," by Corey Kilgannon. ''The New York Times,'' September 10, 2006, section 14LI, page 1.</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==External links==
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