The Town of Canisteo's schools are all located in the
village of Canisteo.
One room schools Canisteo's first school was a one-room school on Greenwood Street, across from the present Baptist Church. A schoolhouse was built in 1826. In 1900, a report on the "annual school meeting", held in the "union school building", reveals that the school would cost $7,947 () to run for the coming year, of which $4,495.32 () would be raised by tax. There were 54 voters at the meeting, which reduced the Board of Education from nine to five members. After its abandonment in 1914 when the Greenwood Street Elementary School was built, it became Strait's Mill, then a feed store, before being torn down about 1952 and replaced by a bus garage. Adjacent to it to the south, between Fifth and Sixth Streets, is the
Rotary Field, which remained the venue for school sports until the 1990s, when new facilities were built on Purdy Creek Road.
Canisteo Academy Canisteo Academy was the second high school, at the time called academies, in
Steuben County (the first was the long-vanished
Addison Academy). It came into legal existence in 1868, and obtained funding to build a brick building on Greenwood Street, which opened in 1871. Students paid tuition until 1897, when it became a free public school. Tuition in 1874 was $10 per term. At that time the following subjects were offered, arranged by school department: Latin, Greek, German, French, and English language; arithmetic, algebra, and geometry;
natural philosophy (science), botany, geology, physiology, anatomy, and geography. They were not all taught in every term. In 1901,
Regents Exams were given in
rhetoric,
civics, economics,
Caesar (Latin),
Virgil (Latin),
Xenophon (Greek), and
physiology.
Principal in 1894 was D. M. Estee,
A.M., author of a textbook on government. and again on December 19–23.
Twentieth-century schools An elementary school was built in 1914 just to the south of the academy, replacing the 5th Street building. In 1937, with consolidation of the town schools, the academy building was demolished, as was the Elementary School with the exception of the heating plant, in the rear. A new Canisteo Central School was constructed, attaching to the preserved heating plant portion of the elementary school, constructing a new front and main entrance facing Greenwood Street, connecting with the portion of the building occupying the academy site. This is today (2019) the Canisteo–Greenwood High School. An addition was constructed in 1949, containing a cafeteria, music rooms, and classrooms. In 1959, a new elementary school was constructed further south, at 120 Greenwood Street, including a competition swimming pool. In the vote authorizing the construction, the swimming pool was on the ballot separately, but both passed, the pool by a smaller margin. At present the building houses both the elementary and a middle school. In 2004, the Canisteo schools merged with those of Greenwood to form the Canisteo-Greenwood School District. Canisteo-Greenwood in 2017 is the only school in Steuben County that has an orchestra as well as a band. The only other orchestra, at
Corning Northside in the much larger city of
Corning, closed about 1990. ==Geography==