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The Salt Lake City School District (SLCSD) is the oldest public school district in Utah. Boundaries for the district are identical to the city limits for Salt Lake City . Employing about 1,300 teachers who instruct about 25,000 students K-12 , the district is the ninth largest in the state, as of 2009, behind Granite , Davis , Alpine , Jordan ...
Cache County School District [8] 16,976 16 6 2 6 642 Steven C. Norton Canyons School District [9] 33,899 30 8 5 6 1,377 James Briscoe Carbon School District [10] 3,500 5 2 1 3 151 Steven E. Carlsen Daggett School District [11] 181 2 0 1 2 17 E. Bruce Northcott Davis School District [12] 69,879 60 16 8 7 2,575 Dan Linford Duchesne County School ...
The district was created in 1904 with 3,354 students. [3] Its name and original boundaries were taken from the Jordan Stake of the LDS Church, which at the time spanned the breadth of the Salt Lake Valley from east to west, and the length of the valley from roughly Midvale to the south end of the valley.
Canyons District was created after residents voted in 2007 to leave the Jordan School District, which was the largest district in Utah at the time. [5] David Doty, a former high school Spanish teacher and assistant commissioner and director of policy studies for the Utah System of Higher Education, was chosen by the new board of education to be the district's first superintendent.
In December 1904 the Salt Lake County Commission voted to combine 22 of the 36 local school districts into the Granite School District with boundaries that matched the LDS Granite Stake boundaries. Schools which up to that time were often numbered were given names.
Hillcrest High School opened its doors to students in the fall of 1962 as the third operating high school in the Jordan School District at the time. It is located on a 38-acre (150,000 m 2) site approximately 12 miles (19 km) south of Salt Lake City.
The district was created in 1904 with 4,258 students. [2] Its name and original boundaries were taken from the Granite Stake of the LDS Church, which at the time spanned nearly the entire breadth of the Salt Lake Valley from Mill Creek in the east to Hunter in the west, and from roughly Sugar House in the north to Bennion in the south. [3]
Realms Of Inquiry – Salt Lake City; Rowland Hall-St. Mark's School – Salt Lake City; Salt Lake Center for Science Education (SLCSE) – Salt Lake City – charter school ; Salt Lake School of the Performing Arts – Salt Lake City – charter school attached to Highland High School ; Summit Academy High School – Bluffdale