Primary and secondary schools serves a small section of Vickery Meadow The
Dallas Independent School District operates schools serving Vickery. Five DISD schools are located in the Midtown Improvement District. Lee A. McShan, Jr. Elementary School, and Jill Stone Elementary School at Vickery Meadow. Other elementary schools serving Vickery Meadow include L. L. Hotchkiss Elementary School and Dan D. Rogers Elementary School. Sam Tasby Middle School and
Emmett J. Conrad High School serve most of Vickery, and are both within the improvement district. A small portion of Vickery is zoned to Benjamin Franklin Middle School and
Hillcrest High School. Stone Elementary includes two main buildings, with one including the administrative offices, the media center, and several classrooms and the other including common areas and public function facilities, and modular classroom buildings with individual telephone and toilet facilities. The two story main Stone building has outdoor stairwells and faces an inner courtyard. Jayne Noble Suhler of
The Dallas Morning News said "[i]n a neighborhood of apartments, [Stone Elementary] fits right in[...]" McShan, located on an site, includes of space with 33 core classrooms, three special education classrooms, dedicated classrooms for art, science, and technology classes, a 400-seat auditorium, and a gymnasium. Lowe has of space with 34 classrooms.
History of schools In the 1990s the population of Vickery's children increased. Therefore, the student population at the public schools increased, requiring the building of new campuses. The proposed Hotchkiss neighborhood would relieve Kramer, Pershing,
Preston Hollow, and Dan D. Rogers schools. In 1992 federal judge
Barefoot Sanders blocked the reopening of Hotchkiss, so school board members filed an appeal with the
5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1994 Hotchkiss re-opened as a neighborhood school. The school expected to receive 875 students; it actually received almost 925. The school had to use 17 portable classrooms, and two classrooms had to be converted into food storage rooms. Judy Zimny, the principal of Hotchkiss, said that most of the students came from the apartments in the Abrams Road, Northwest Highway, and Skillman Road area. The school was 42% black, 38% Hispanic, and 20% White. The school is located within what was then a mostly-White residential neighborhood, but in 1994 most of the White students to Hotchkiss were bussed in from other locations. About 100 students from other areas were voluntarily enrolled in Hotchkiss so Hotchkiss's racial demographics were more balanced. In a 1998 journal article by
American School & University, Michael Brown, the executive director of Dallas ISD's facilities planning department said that the
bond program did not have sufficient funds for a new school. The district took money from the general operating fund, which would be reimbursed after the following bond program would be passed. When it opened, Vickery Meadow Elementary took in 400 students. Previously students who were bussed to other campuses in the Dallas area were now able to walk to their zoned schools. As of 1998, all students at Vickery Meadow Elementary were immersed in completely English classes for eight weeks before being placed in bilingual or ESL classes. The district anticipated that the school would be 75% Hispanic. During the same year Tasby and Conrad opened. Other portions were zoned to
Bryan Adams High School and Hill Middle School. Before Lowe opened, Hexter,
Lakewood, and Preston Hollow elementary schools served sections of Vickery Meadow. The areas that were zoned to Hexter and Lakewood were rezoned to Hotchkiss, and the areas zoned to Preston Hollow were rezoned to Lowe.
Community colleges Dallas College, the
Dallas County Community College District operates area community colleges. The closest campus to Vickery is
Richland College in Dallas.
Public libraries Vickery Park Library Vickery Park Branch public library opened in 2021 at 8383 Park Lane in the Dallas Public Library system. Vickery Park is community center for education, culture and special events for youth and families.
Skillman Southwestern The Skillman Southwestern Branch Library of the
Dallas Public Library, at 5707 Skillman Street at Southwestern Boulevard, is south of and serves Vickery. The library opened in July 1996 and received dedication on August 18, 1996. A 1978 bond authorized by Dallas voters lead to the construction of the Skillman Southwestern library. Ramiro Salazar, then the director of the Dallas library system said in 1996 that the opening of Skillman Southwestern satisfied "the needs of a community that didn't have an accessible library for a long time." ==Non-profit organizations==