The fashion industry loves to pluck out the next big thing from a college graduation show, but universities aren’t the only places talent is being fostered.
In New York City, the public school system includes specialized programs for promising students that offer advanced educational opportunities around specific career fields. Among these is the High School of Fashion Industries (HSFI): Founded in 1926, it began as a training ground for needle trades (it’s where the Fashion Institute of Technology originated), and is now a fashion-focused Career and Technical Education (CTE) high school that prepares students grades 9 through 12 for careers in the fashion industry, ranging from business to design.
“Not only are we remaining vigilant in looking towards the future, we’re very, very connected with our past, our history and our legacy,” says Tara Ricci, HSFI’s department coordinator of fashion design and software development.
Below, staff, alumi and current students break down the ins and outs of attending a fashion high school — from class expectations to internship opportunities to the post-grad experience.
Admissions Process
Applications for HSFI open in October to students in the eighth grade, and are due that December. There are six majors prospective students rank when applying: Fashion Design, Art & Graphic Design, Photography, Software Development, Fashion Marketing and Management and Visual Presentation & Design. Each calls for different portfolio requirements. Applying may not be a complex process, but it is competitive — each class ends up with a waitlist.
Considering students are so young when they enter HSFI, nobody is expected to come in with hard, technical skills. What they should have, however, is passion and creativity.
“Skills can be taught and mastered, but that ingenuity, that kind of thinking, that’s very hard to cultivate,” Ricci says. “Kids apply knowing what our program entails. Our mission at the school is to really hone in on the students who want to be here. If the students are willing and wanting to learn and they show up that way, we meet them that way.”
Once they’re enrolled, it’s recommended that students stick to the major they applied for. If they want to switch, they have until the end of ninth grade to do so, mainly because the strict curriculum set-up and major-specific classes leave little-to-no room for indecisiveness. (Similarly, HSFI rarely takes transfer students due to its rigorous four-year program and difficulty in transferring credits.) Cross-major electives are available — for example, a design student can take a photography class — but even then, that’s only if students have the time.
“I think the hard part is that you’re balancing fashion and regular classes,” Fashion Design alum Noreamy Almanzar, ’23, says. “You still have to take your regents and have your credits for the other classes, all on top of doing your fashion work.”