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In July 1945 a new bond issue totaling $750,000.00 passed providing the district with enough funding for several new facilities which included a new building for black eighth and ninth graders at Booker T. Washington, a new high school on 14th Ave which would be called Texas City High School, Roosevelt Elementary and Wilson Elementary.
Texas school district boundaries are not always aligned with county or city boundaries; a district can occupy several counties and cities, while a single city (especially larger ones such as Dallas, Houston, or San Antonio) may be split between several districts. Almost all Texas school districts use the title "Independent School District", or ISD.
Texas City High School (TCHS) is a public high school in Texas City, Texas, in the Greater Houston area. It is one of two high schools in the Texas City Independent School District (TCISD), the other being La Marque High School. The main school building for Texas City High opened in 1952.
In 2009, the school district was rated "academically acceptable" by the Texas Education Agency.[2]The Texas Education Agency's college readiness performance data shows that only 3.1% (5 out of 152 students) of the graduates of the class of 2010 of the La Marque school district met TEA's average performance criterion on SAT or ACT college admission tests.
Texas' 24th congressional district of the United States House of Representatives covers much of the suburban area in between Fort Worth and Dallas in the state of Texas and centers along the Dallas–Tarrant county line. The district has about 529,000 potential voters (citizens, age 18+). Of these, 57% are White, 16% Latino, 14% Black, and 10% ...
Knox City High School (grades 9–12) 1983 Class A state football champions [2] O'Brien Middle (grades 5–8) previously O'Brien High School, which was the 1972 Texas state champion in six-man football, the first title ever awarded in this classification [2] Knox City Elementary (prekindergarten-grade 4)
During 2022–2023, Johnson High School had an enrollment of 247 students in grades 9–12 and a student to teacher ratio of 10.37. [2] The school received an overall rating of "A" from the Texas Education Agency for the 2021–2022 school year. [3] Lyndon B. Johnson Middle School (Grades 6–8)
From 1919 until the 1937-1938 school year, the Highlands area was also a part of Crosby Independent School District until it was transferred into the Goose Creek Independent School District. [5] According to Texas Education Agency Snapshot 2016 District Detail, Crosby ISD served 5,666 students. 16.3% were African American, 34.9% Hispanic, 45.9% ...