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You are at:Home»News»Inside Dallas ISD»Letting girls shine and grow in Pleasant Grove

Letting girls shine and grow in Pleasant Grove

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By The Hub on October 23, 2025 Inside Dallas ISD

Young Women’s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs is proving what girl power can really accomplish.

The change to an all-girls school was prompted by the need to deal with academic and behavioral issues at the school when it served boys and girls at a time when it was also going through a major rebuild.

A transformation to a new model was proposed following the example of Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women’s Leadership School. With support from Lynn McBee, president and CEO of the Young Women’s Preparatory Network, the district launched a parental opt-in pilot program in 2014.

“We were all on the third floor, and it was nothing but classes of all girls,” said Principal Bridget Ladipo, who began her career at Balch Springs Middle School as a seventh-grade science teacher. “Parents had to opt in to the program, and most did. On the first and second floors, we were pretty much co-ed.”

Following the successful results, the school officially became Young Women’s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs in 2016. 

Since then, the academy, according to Ladipo, has been taking girls where they need to be academically. The school offers comprehensive academic pathways that include an engineering pathway that starts in sixth grade and leads to an engineering certification, an advanced art pathway where students can develop artistic skills and even sell their artwork, and an advanced dance program. Extracurricular activities are diverse, featuring Girl Scouts during the school day; UIL competitive sports like volleyball, cross country, softball, and track; and special academic clubs focused on developing skills and talents.

“Most of these girls are going to be first-generation college girls,” said Ladipo. “We want to give them the skills, give them the knowledge, and also bring their parents in to collaborate.”

Among the unique opportunities the school provides are college campus visits, conferences with women in STEM, United Way events, and field trips. Additionally, students are required to complete service hours and engage in college and career preparation programs that start as early as sixth grade.

Coach Keenanlan Clemmons said the single-gender model fosters more participation among the girls.

“I’ve been here since the school opened in 2012, and while I experienced the co-ed model, I love the single-gender environment,” he said. “For me, it’s particularly better on the sports and participation side. We see much more participation from the girls now than we did when the school was co-ed.”

Other teachers, like John Fore, said that increased participation in both sports and academics has been observed since the change. More significantly, Fore has witnessed the girls blossom into confident young women.

“We instill leadership qualities, constantly reminding them, ‘who rules the world? Girls.’ This helps them to blossom into the well-rounded scholar of the 21st century that we know they can be,” he said.

Young Women’s Academy is gradually expanding into a full high school. Since last year, the school began its high school expansion by adding one grade a year, and will see its first graduating class in 2028. Ladipo added that teachers are actively receiving training to support the high school level curriculum.

“We want to slowly but surely ensure that the needs of our students are being addressed,” Ladipo said. “We want to develop our teachers to ensure that they have the skills to teach our high schoolers.”

The young girls who graduate from this school are consistently advanced in mathematics, more likely to participate in class, and often jump straight to varsity sports in high school, according to Ladipo.

“Even with academics, we consistently hear feedback from our feeder high schools that our girls are often far more advanced in math and use their voice more confidently. Once they return to a co-ed setting, they are far more likely to speak up and answer questions in class,” said Lapido.

At Young Women’s,  girls don’t just learn—they prepare to lead, innovate, and change the world, Clemmons said.

“If we could tell the girls one thing, it’s this: Young Women’s STEAM Academy is your passport to the world,” he said. “When you leave us, you will be prepared for life, whether that’s through academics, athletics, or essential leadership skills. Every student who comes to this school leaves with a valuable foundation for success.”

To learn more about Young Women’s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs, attend Discover Dallas ISD on Saturday, Nov. 1, at the Automobile Building in Fair Park.

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