A fair at the Martin Luther King, Jr. high school building on the Upper West Side this weekend will introduce the 12 new high schools that are scheduled to open in September. A handbook listing the schools will be is posted online and  available at the fair on February 12-13, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Eighth graders interested in attending these schools may request an application from their guidance counselor.  Although high school applications were submitted in December, students may change their applications if they applied to a school that will now be closing or if they want to attend a new school. The  fair comes the week after the Panel for Education Policy voted to close 22 schools, most of which will be replaced by small schools.

Here's a rundown of what we know so far, according to news reports and proposals on the DOE's website.

IBM will be partnering with the DOE to open a school in Paul Robeson High School. According to NY 1, it will be the first public high school offering a six-year program where students graduate with an associate degree in Information Technology. A popular selective Manhattan school will be replicated in Brooklyn. Millennium Brooklyn will open on the John Jay High Schoolcampus, despite spirited opposition from staff and students at other schools in the building, two of which will have their middle school phased out.  It will also offer a program for autistic children.<!--more-->

Elsewhere in Brooklyn, there will be a new school on the Bushwick campus, in the space formerly occupied by Urban Assembly New York Harbor  School which moved to Governor's Island.

In the Bronx, several new high schools will open: one in Monroe High School, replacing Monroe Academy for Business and Law High School; two in both Columbus and Kennedy high schools which will be closing, and another will replace Performance Conservatory.

In Queens, a new high school will move in Beach Channel. At Jamaica High School, the successful Gateway Program is to become a school, Jamaica Gateway School of the Sciences.

Insideschools will  have profiles of the new schools after the fair.

Specialized high school results

On Friday, preceding the fair, in the first round of high school admissions,  students will receive the results of their specialized high school exams and auditions,  learning whether they have been admitted to one of the city's nine most selective schools.

Students who are accepted at a specialized school will also find out whether they were matched to another school on their applications. All others will have to wait until the main round results are distributed on March 31. The timeline for high school admissions is posted on the DOE’s website.

Anxious eighth and ninth-graders are already beginning the countdown on a Facebook page: OMG SHSAT RESULTS.

3 p.m. update :

Here's a list of the new schools and their locations (several of the locations are pending the approval of the PEP):

Bronx

Bronx Design and Construction Academy (Alfred E. Smith High School)

Bronx Envision Academy (IS 98 building shared with Performance Conservatory)

Bronxdale High School (Christopher Columbus High School)

The Metropolitan Soundview High School (James Monroe campus)

Pelham High School for Language and Innovation (Christopher Columbus High School)

Brooklyn

Brooklyn School for Math and Research (Bushwick High School campus)

Millennium Brooklyn (John Jay High Schoolcampus)

Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-Tech)  (Paul Robeson High School)

Manhattan

The Urban Assembly Gateway School for Technology (High School of Graphic Communications)

Queens

Jamaica Gateway to the Sciences (Jamaica High School)

Maspeth High School (Metropolitan Avenue Campus)

Rockaway Collegiate High School (Beach Channel High School)