Niagara-Wheatfield Central School District is a public school district in New York State located in the Town of Lewiston, New York, about from Niagara Falls, New York. The district serves students from the towns of Niagara and Wheatfield.
Previous assignment and reason for departure in parentheses
The school district operates six schools.
Niagara-Wheatfield High School is located at 2292 Saunders Settlement Road in Sanborn, New York and serves grades 9 through 12. The current interim principal is Jeffrey White.
Niagara Wheatfield High School opened on September 8, 1958, as Niagara Wheatfield Junior-Senior High School and was dedicated on April 12, 1959. The time capsule was buried in the cornerstone during the laying on June 8, 1958.
Edward Town Middle School is located at 2292 Sanders Settlement Road in Sanborn and serves grades 6, 7, and 8. The current principal is Eleanor Payne.
Edward Town Middle School opened on October 13, 1965, as Edward Town Junior High School and was dedicated on April 24, 1966.
Colonial Village Elementary School is located in Lewiston, and is located at 1456 Saunders Settlement Road. It serves grades K through 5. The current principal is Marissa Vuich.
Errick Road Elementary School is located at 6839 Errick Road in Wheatfield and serves grades K through 5. The current principal is Nora O'Bryan.
Tuscarora Nation School is located at 2015 Mt. Hope Street in Lewiston and serves grades K through 6. The current principal is Elizabeth Corieri.
West Street Elementary School is located at 5700 West Street in Sanborn and serves grades K through 5. The current principal is Theron Mong.
West Street Elementary School was built and opened on September 9, 1998.
Niagara-Wheatfield Senior High School's official school colors are black & white and red. The school's mascot is the Falcon, and its sports teams and other competitive teams are also referred to as the "Niagara-Wheafield Falcons."
Overall, Niagara-Wheatfield Central School District's academic and behavioral statistics are higher than the New York State average. In 2006 the average attendance rate for all high school students was 93%. Total suspension count for the year was 94 incidents. 96% of the Class of 2006 earned New York State Regents diplomas, while only 4% earned local diplomas. 56.8% of total students earned New York State Regents diplomas with advanced designations (honors). 69.2% of students with disabilities earned New York State Regents diplomas.
In 2022, the New York Attorney General sued the school district for failing to protect their students from bullying and harassment, and the district won a decision at the trial court level. On appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the school district lost in 2024. The appellate court held "that the State of New York had met its burden of pleading parens patriae standing at this stage of the litigation."
Athletics: NW has an array of sports programs, including baseball, football, basketball, bowling, wrestling, cheer-leading, track, cross country, tennis, volleyball, swimming, golf, soccer, hockey and softball. Niagara-Wheatfield competes in the NFL (Niagara Frontier League) with rival schools such as Lewiston-Porter, Niagara Falls, and Lockport. Niagara-Wheatfield is in New York's Section 6.
Academic Organizations: Niagara-Wheatfield also offers a wide variety of other organizations that students can join based on their interests.
The majority of each year's graduating classes go on to pursue two and four-year college-level degrees. 38.5% of students in the Class of 2006 went on to start a 4-year degree program (91 students in-state and 4 out of state), 46% went on to start a 2-year degree, 4.3% went on to start other vocational training programs, and 28 students total started employment immediately post graduation.
On April 24, 2008, Niagara-Wheatfield High School celebrated its "golden anniversary" of 50 years with a "Soda Shop Sock Hop with Big Wheelie and the Hubcaps and root beer floats", inviting all NW alumni who have graduated from the school since its opening 50 years ago.