Skip to main content
Washington Latin Charter School
Home / Residency Experience / Teacher Residency locations / Washington Latin Public Charter School

Washington Latin Public Charter School

Washington Latin Public Charter Schools include two campuses: one serving Grades 5-12 in the Fort Totten neighborhood of Washington, DC, and the other currently serving Grades 5-6 in the Edgewood neighborhood. The second campus will add a new grade each year until it reaches Grade 12. That campus will move from a temporary location to a permanent site for the 2025-2026 school year. Each school maintains a small-by-design diverse community where inspiration, warmth, and holistic education take center stage.

Washington Latin schools are liberal arts, college preparatory schools grounded in a classical mission. They emphasize curriculum that explores the history of the ancients and develops understanding, knowledge, and humanity of its scholars. The school views education as a training of character, and character is the intersection of intellectual development and moral integrity. Students at Washington Latin are both encouraged and prepared to be thoughtful people who will contribute to the public good and continue lifelong quests toward a fuller humanity. Teachers and administrators are passionate about the mission and commit themselves to support the growth of well-rounded students who are exposed to broad academic and language skills.

The school operates by an unofficial motto that words matter, ideas matter, and people matter. Excellent teachers are a priority, and with ample support are given autonomy to create a culture of learning for their diverse student body. An important practice at Washington Latin is that all adults contribute to teaching and learning and instruct at least one class every year. Our leaders are teachers, our teachers are leaders.

Student population

Middle school
44% White
40% Black
9% Hispanic
4% Two or more races
3% Asian

Upper/high school
50% Black
35% White
9% Hispanic
3% Two or more races
3% Asian

72%

OF STUDENTS ARE PROFICIENT IN READING

92%

AVERAGE GRADUATION RATE

8%

QUALIFY FOR FREE / REDUCED LUNCH

47%

OF STUDENTS ARE PROFICIENT IN MATH

Residency site locations

  • Cooper Campus
  • 2nd Street Campus

The details

  • 30-credit master of arts in teaching (MAT) program
  • Meet online with NYU Steinhardt faculty and peers twice per week in the evening for your course work ~15 hours/week
  • ~40 hours/week in classroom residency at partner location
  • Tuition subsidy and stipend or wage from partner school
  • Two-year commitment following residency required
  • Please note Washington Latin is not currently designated as a Title 1 school
  • Full-day cost details

As a teacher resident, you’ll work alongside another teacher and gain responsibility throughout the year. This immersive learning is designed to assist you with understanding your students and their learning process, setting you up to have a class of your own the following year.

During residency year

Estimated Stipend

$40,000


Health Insurance

Full Medical, Dental, and Vision Benefits


Start Date

August 2024


After residency year

Job After Graduation

Teacher (full time)

After successful completion of the program, you will have a job waiting for you as a teacher at Washington Latin. In exchange for providing a master’s subsidy and funding to offset your living expenses during your residency year, Washington Latin requires you to make a commitment to teach there for at least two years after earning your degree.


Estimated Starting Salary with Master’s Degree

Commensurate with experience


The figures above are estimates provided by our partners for informational and planning purposes only. NYU Steinhardt does not guarantee these amounts.

Now accepting applications for the 2024 cohort. Apply by our next deadline, April 30, 2024.


Whether you aspire to become a special education teacher in an integrated co-teaching classroom or a US history teacher for Advanced Placement students, this program offers the skills needed to connect with, engage, empower, challenge, and reach all of your students.

DIANA TURK
DIRECTOR OF TEACHER EDUCATION; CHAIR, DEPARTMENT OF TEACHING AND LEARNING AT NYU STEINHARDT; CO-DIRECTOR, NYU TEACHER RESIDENCY


We built this program from the ground up, and [the faculty] all agreed on starting with the ideas of building community and understanding identity.

HEATHER WOODLEY
CLINICAL ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF TESOL, BILINGUAL EDUCATION, AND WORLD LANGUAGE EDUCATION