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Clarksville-Montgomery County School System (CMCSS) is a system of schools in Montgomery County, Tennessee serving a population of over 166,722 people. It is the seventh largest district in Tennessee and has earned whole district accreditation. CMCSS is also ISO 9001 certified. Jean Luna-Vedder is currently the Director of Schools.
Total enrollment in the county school system, as of the 2010–2011 school year, was about 47,000 students, [10] making the district the fourth largest in Tennessee. [11] With the Memphis/Shelby County merger completed, the district received an addition of more than 100,000 students, making it the largest system in the state and one of the ...
[91] Multiple proposals have been filed to scale back, delay, or outright repeal the standards in Tennessee. [92] [93] Tennessee passed a law to phase out common core in 2016. [94] The new standard, The Tennessee Academic Standards, were implemented in English and Math for the 2017/2018 school year. [95]
How Tennessee teacher shortages compare to the rest of the nation. Statewide, the analysis estimated there are around 60,000 teachers in the workforce, with more than 1,000 vacancies. That number ...
A teacher spent months in administrative proceedings over objections to state-approved curriculum. Nearly two years after Tennessee's GOP-dominated Statehouse passed wide-sweeping bans on teaching ...
We call on state leaders to make bold commitments to invest more meaningfully in future teachers - so that every Tennessee student can thrive.
The average teacher experience is 13.0 years at the elementary level, 11.5 years at the middle school level, and 14.0 years at the high school level. A total of 39.83 percent of MNPS teachers have a bachelor's degree, 36.67 percent have a master's degree, 18.81 percent have Master's plus, and 4.6 percent have a doctorate degree. [citation needed]
This is a list of public school districts in Tennessee, sorted alphabetically. The majority of school districts are operated by county governments, and some by city governments. The U.S. Census Bureau does not consider those to be independent governments. There are also "special school districts," and those are independent governments. [1