A comprehensive look at K–12 schools, universities, youth athletics, after-school programs, and the learning ecosystem powering the next generation in Miami Gardens
Miami Gardens is served by Miami-Dade County Public Schools — the 4th largest district in the U.S., with a 6-year consecutive "A" rating from the Florida Department of Education
One of Miami Gardens' flagship public high schools, Carol City Senior High has served the Carol City neighborhood since 1963. Offers AP courses, dual enrollment, JROTC, and a broad range of extracurriculars. Strong athletic tradition and community partnerships with local businesses.
Ranked #804 in Florida among 2,193 elementary schools. Achieves 57% math proficiency and 47% reading proficiency — both above the district average. Serves Pre-K through 8th grade with a strong community-focused learning environment and enrichment programs.
Honors former Miami Gardens U.S. Congresswoman Dr. Frederica S. Wilson. Features Boys & Girls Club partnership for after-school programming running Monday–Friday 2–7 PM, with homework help, tutoring, literacy programs, and enrichment activities for enrolled students.
In 2025, the state ranked M-DCPS as the 8th highest-performing district in Florida — ahead of Broward (10th), Orange (18th), and Hillsborough (31st). Miami's 4th graders outperformed peers in every other large urban district in the country in math on the 2024 NAEP, scoring on par with Massachusetts, the nation's highest-performing state. Miami Gardens students feed into this nationally recognized system.
Miami Gardens is the only city its size in South Florida with two fully accredited universities inside city limits — a rare economic and cultural advantage
St. Thomas University is a private Catholic institution offering undergraduate, graduate, and law degrees across disciplines including business administration, nursing, education, criminal justice, sport administration, and theology. With 5,000+ students, STU is a significant employer and economic anchor in Miami Gardens, bringing faculty, staff, research activity, and institutional purchasing power into the local economy.
STU's School of Law produces graduates who enter Miami-Dade's legal community, while partnerships with local healthcare and business organizations create internship and employment pipelines that benefit Miami Gardens residents directly.
Florida Memorial University is South Florida's only Historically Black College and University — a designation that carries profound national significance. Founded in 1879, FMU offers degrees in aviation science, STEM, nursing, business, education, and social work. The university is a cornerstone of Miami Gardens' cultural identity and a pipeline of professional talent for the city's majority African-American community.
FMU's summer programs are open to the community, including the AIM Higher pre-collegiate program (grades 6–12), the ROAR Marching Band Camp, and Air Force JROTC pilot training. FMU's presence anchors Miami Gardens as a center of Black academic and cultural achievement in Florida.
Where residents stand today — and what the city's investments in youth programs are building toward for tomorrow
After-school programs, sports leagues, summer camps, and mentorship initiatives that keep Miami Gardens youth engaged, safe, and growing year-round
The Miami Gardens PAL (501c3) builds trust between law enforcement and youth through education, athletics, and teen leadership programs. Sports include boxing, basketball, football, and more. All programs free-of-charge, ensuring no financial barrier to participation. Located at 18611 NW 27th Ave — the hub of the city's youth athletic community.
Ages 5–18 | Free ProgramsCity-run summer camps operate across multiple park sites including Rolling Oaks, Betty T. Ferguson Recreational Complex, and Scott Park. 8-week programs blend sports, arts, STEM activities, literacy enrichment, and field trips. Online registration available. Essential for working families needing affordable supervised childcare during summer months.
K–12 | Multiple LocationsThe Boys & Girls Club of Miami-Dade operates an after-school program at Dr. Frederica Wilson/Skyway Elementary School. Monday–Friday, 2–7 PM for K–12. Services include homework assistance, tutoring, literacy activities, arts & crafts, career readiness (CareerLaunch program), and sports leagues including flag football, basketball, and soccer through ALL STARS.
Mon–Fri 2–7 PMFlorida Memorial University's two-week summer enrichment program for grades 6–12, centered on character, leadership, accountability, service, and scholarship. Open to Miami Gardens students, with campus access to university facilities. The program also offers Air Force JROTC pilot training — an 8-week program for high school students to earn a private pilot license, funded by AFJROTC.
Grades 6–12 | On FMU CampusFlorida Memorial University's signature ROAR Summer Band Camp brings top band directors and clinicians to Miami Gardens. Students participate in intensive musical training in a college environment — building discipline, artistry, and ensemble skills. An exceptional opportunity for student musicians who may aspire to college-level performance and beyond.
Annual | FMU CampusThe City Parks & Recreation Department coordinates year-round youth sports leagues at Betty T. Ferguson Complex and Scott Park covering football, soccer, baseball, and softball. Leagues serve all skill levels from recreational to competitive. Registration available online through the City's Online Recreation Activities portal. Coaches and volunteers actively recruited from the community.
Year-Round | All Skill LevelsMiami-Dade Public Library branches serving Miami Gardens offer free computer access, Wi-Fi, homework help sessions, digital literacy programs for youth, and reading clubs for all ages. Integrated into the county's 49-branch system — Miami Gardens residents access millions of digital and physical resources through one library card, including e-books, databases, and streaming services.
Free | All AgesAdult learners in Miami Gardens access free GED preparation, English as a Second Language (ESL), adult literacy, and job readiness programs through community centers and library branches. Critical for Miami Gardens' 18.4% of adults without a high school diploma — these programs serve as gateways to higher wages, career advancement, and greater economic participation for immigrant and native-born residents alike.
Free | Community CentersMiami-Dade's robust magnet school system gives Miami Gardens families access to specialized STEM, arts, and gifted programs citywide. The district's magnet network is one of the most extensive in the U.S. — offering paths in engineering, aviation, performing arts, dual-language immersion, and IB programs to students who qualify. AP and dual enrollment courses are widely available at local high schools.
Citywide Access | MDCPS MagnetFrom PAL boxing at 6 AM to FMU pilot training at 17, Miami Gardens has built a layered, year-round ecosystem of youth programming that meets young people at every age, interest, and skill level — the vast majority at zero or minimal cost to families.
How M-DCPS investments and performance rank across Florida and nationally
| Metric | M-DCPS / Miami Gardens | Broward County | Orange County | Florida State Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| State District Grade (2025) | A ✓ (6th year) | B | B | B avg |
| Florida Ranking (2025) | #8 of 67 ✓ | #10 | #18 | — |
| Math Proficiency | 55% ✓ | 53% | 52% | 52% |
| Reading Proficiency | 56% ✓ | 54% | 51% | 50% |
| Students in A/B Schools (2025) | 87% ✓ | ~78% | ~74% | ~72% |
| Total Students | 335,500 | ~271,000 | ~219,000 | Varies |
| Universities In Area | 2 in-city ✓ | FAU, FIU nearby | UCF nearby | Varies |
| NAEP 4th Grade Math (2024) | #1 Urban Dist. ✓ | Not ranked | Not ranked | 52% prof. |
Florida's school grading system is the most rigorous public accountability mechanism in the state — calculating district scores from math and reading achievement, year-over-year learning gains, middle school acceleration, four-year graduation rates, and college-and-career readiness indicators like AP, IB, dual enrollment, and industry certifications. Earning a single "A" is a meaningful accomplishment. Earning six in a row, while serving over 335,000 students from one of the most economically and linguistically diverse communities in America, is something else entirely.
That NAEP result — 4th graders outscoring Chicago, New York, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles — is the kind of benchmark that puts Miami-Dade in genuine national company. The district's #8 Florida ranking in 2025, ahead of Broward (10th), Orange (18th), and Hillsborough (31st), means that Miami Gardens families have access to one of the strongest school systems in the state, one that consistently outperforms much wealthier suburban districts.
For families making relocation decisions, this matters enormously. School quality is often the primary driver of where families choose to live — and Miami Gardens delivers that quality at a price point that no comparably educated suburb in South Florida can match. The combination of 87% of students in A or B rated schools with Miami Gardens' below-median housing costs creates a value proposition that is, in the current South Florida market, essentially unique.
The presence of a university in a city is not merely an amenity — it is an economic multiplier that compounds over time. Universities employ administrators, faculty, and staff. They generate demand for housing, food service, printing, childcare, and professional services. They attract visitors for athletic events, performances, and academic conferences. They produce graduates who enter the workforce and, if the city is livable enough, choose to start businesses and raise families nearby.
Miami Gardens having two universities within city limits — St. Thomas University and Florida Memorial University — gives it an economic and institutional stability that few cities of comparable size possess. When private employers leave, universities remain. When economic cycles contract, higher education expands (enrollment typically grows in downturns). The combined student population of 6,500+ brings consistent foot traffic, economic activity, and intellectual energy that enriches the entire city.
Florida Memorial University deserves particular recognition. Founded in 1879, FMU is not simply a regional college — it is a historically significant institution, one of only 101 HBCUs in the United States, and the only one in South Florida. Its presence in Miami Gardens is a statement about the city's identity and a profound asset for its majority African-American community. FMU's programs in aviation, STEM, nursing, and education give Miami Gardens residents access to career-track degrees without leaving their city — an access that is economically transformative for first-generation college students and working adults who cannot easily relocate.
St. Thomas University's School of Law, meanwhile, produces attorneys who enter Miami-Dade's legal ecosystem — many of whom serve and represent Miami Gardens community members. The university's commitment to community engagement and social justice aligns with the city's character, making the STU-Miami Gardens relationship more than transactional. Together, the two universities constitute a genuine competitive advantage — not just for education, but for economic development, workforce quality, and the city's long-term trajectory.
After-school programs are rarely discussed as economic policy. They should be. When a city provides safe, enriching, affordable after-school and summer programming for its children, it does several things simultaneously: it reduces juvenile crime and delinquency, it supports parental workforce participation (parents who don't have childcare often can't work), it closes learning gaps that widen over summers, and it builds the human capital that drives long-term economic growth. Miami Gardens' layered youth programming ecosystem — PAL athletics, Boys & Girls Club after-school, city summer camps, FMU pre-collegiate programs, library literacy initiatives — is one of the city's most important and least-celebrated investments.
The Miami Gardens PAL's model is particularly powerful. By building positive relationships between youth and law enforcement through sports and mentorship — and making those programs entirely free — PAL creates social capital and community trust that has measurable long-term effects on public safety. Youth who build relationships with police officers through athletics are less likely to have adversarial encounters as adults. Communities where youth know and trust officers have lower crime rates. The PAL investment is simultaneously youth development, public safety policy, and community relationship-building.
Florida Memorial University's community programs add an aspirational dimension that pure recreation programs cannot provide. When a Miami Gardens teenager participates in FMU's AIM Higher program and walks a college campus for the first time, something shifts. They see higher education as a place where people who look like them belong — where they can earn a pilot's license, study nursing, or pursue a business degree. That shift in perception is difficult to quantify but profoundly consequential. It is, in the truest sense, an investment in Miami Gardens' future.
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