Air Force May Ground Bronx H.S.
Christian Jefferson operates flight simulator at Bronx Aerospace Academy, which is on Air Force probation.
Principal Barbara Kirkweg, who founded school.
A Bronx High School celebrated for sky-high test scores and its unique military affiliation could lose its Air Force funding because of rule violations and $66,800 in unaccounted money.
The Bronx Aerospace Academy - which had one of the city’s highest graduation rates in 2006 and is a crown jewel of the small high school movement - was told by the Air Force last month that it had been placed on probation.
“If compliance with all requirements are not met, the program will be closed at the end of the 2008-2009 school year,” an Air Force letter warned. The probation comes as students, teachers and parents increasingly complain about harsh policies at the school, including a mother who blames administrators for her son’s suicide.
“They’re under a lot of pressure,” said Dehala Morales, whose son, Jonathan, a school sophomore, hanged himself on April 10 after being suspended for his role in a violent fight and being stripped of his rank in the school’s Air Force ROTC program.











