Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of unified school districts (USD) in the state of Kansas. It is grouped by county, based on the headquarters location of each school district. All school districts in Kansas are independent governments. Kansas has no public K-12 school systems dependent on another layer of government like a county government or a municipal ...
In 1963, the School Unification Act in Kansas caused the further consolidatation of thousands of tiny school districts into hundreds of larger Unified School Districts. [ 4 ] Washington County USD 108 was formed in 2006 by the consolidation of North Central USD 221 and Washington-Greenleaf USD 222 .
List of high schools in Kansas from SchoolTree.org; State. Kansas State Department Of Education, KSDE; Kansas State High School Activities Association, KSHSAA; Consolidations. School consolidations in Kansas for past decade; Topeka-Capital Journal; July 24, 2011. Maps. Kansas School District - Boundary Map, KSDE
Kansas City, Kansas Public Schools; Kaw Valley USD 321; Kingman–Norwich USD 331; Kiowa County USD 422; L. La Crosse USD 395; ... Western Plains USD 106; Wichita USD ...
In 1963, the School Unification Act in Kansas caused the further consolidatation of thousands of tiny school districts into hundreds of larger Unified School Districts. [4] USD 106 was formed in 2004 by the consolidation of Ransom USD 302 and Bazine USD 304. [5] In 2005, NesTre La Go USD 301 dissolved, and most of its students moved to Western ...
The Concordia district has both a "junior high" school and a "middle" school in the same district. School districts normally have either a "junior high" or a "middle" school but rarely have both. In Concordia, the middle school houses grades 5-6 where the junior high houses grades 7-8 (as well as grades 9-12 for the senior high in the attached ...
Little River–Windom USD 444 is a public unified school district headquartered in Little River, Kansas, United States. [1] The district includes the communities of Little River, Windom, and nearby rural areas. [2]
In 1969, Florence was one of a hand full of school districts that was still non-unified. In April 1969, the state legislature passed a law pushing all remaining non-unified school districts to attach themselves to adjacent unified school district by July 1, or the state would decide which adjacent district(s) would get their territory. [6] In ...