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The Grand Rapids Public Schools is a public school district serving Grand Rapids, Michigan. Grand Rapids Public Schools (GRPS) is Michigan's eight largest public school district. [1] It is also the third-largest employer in the City of Grand Rapids. GRPS serves nearly 14,557 students with 2,700 employees, including 1,400 teachers.
Airport Senior High School. Airport Community Schools is a public school district in Carleton, Michigan, United States. It is the largest district in Monroe County by area. [3] The districts includes the village of Carleton and the surrounding Ash Township, as well as portions of Frenchtown Charter, Exeter, and Berlin Charter townships. [4]
Lakeview Public Schools (Michigan) Lakeview School District (Battle Creek, Michigan) LakeVille Community Schools; Lamphere Public Schools; Lansing School District; Lincoln Consolidated School District (Michigan) Lincoln Park Public Schools (Michigan) Linden Community Schools; Livonia Public Schools; Lowell Area Schools; Ludington Area Schools
Warren Consolidated Schools is a public school district serving the cities of Warren, Sterling Heights and Troy, Michigan. It operates 25 schools including two specialized partial-day high schools that draw from the other schools within the district. Warren Consolidated has about 12,660 students and a student/teacher ratio of 25:1. [1]
The district was a consolidation of the Sand Lake and Howard City school boards. It came into existence on April 3, 1962, the day members of those communities voted in favor of consolidating their schools; 415 voted, with 366 favoring consolidation. The consolidated schools began operation in fall 1962.
In 1949 the Graham School District consolidated with the Dye School District. The consolidated Dye Schools built two elementary school, Dye in 1956 and Randels in 1961. [4] In the 1950s, the Rankin School District was dissolved and parceled out to Carman, Lake Fenton, Grand Blanc, and Swartz Creek districts. The Hoover School District opened ...
By 1878 there were ten school districts spread throughout the township. In 1903 the state of Michigan passed a law allowing townships to consolidate school districts and mandate a busing system. In 1903–1904, the first consolidated school district in the state stood in Grand Blanc with three classrooms holding 115 students in 10 grades.
The district service area includes all and/or portions of Westland, Wayne, Canton, Dearborn Heights, Inkster, and Romulus. [2] As of 2012 the district had 12,600 students. [3] During the summer of 2013, the Inkster Public Schools District was dissolved. [4] The Wayne-Westland school district absorbed a portion of the Inkster District. [5]