Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rockwood Valley Middle School [11] is a middle school in Wildwood, Missouri. The school was established in 1992. It enrolled 666 students in the 2018–19 school year, [12] and 710 in the 2020–21 school year. Rockwood Valley alumni attend Lafayette High School.
Lafayette County Middle School (06-08) Lafayette County High School (09-12) Lexington R-V School District – Lexington. Leslie Bell Elementary School (PK-04) Lexington Middle School (05-08) Lexington High School (09-12) Odessa R-VII School District – Odessa. McQuerry Elementary School (K-02) Odessa Upper Elementary School (03-05) Odessa ...
In the 2021–22 school year, Lafayette enrolled 1,742 students. The racial makeup of the school is 76.5% White, 9.9% Black, 7.7% Asian, and 3.7% Hispanic. [9] A majority of students at Lafayette are graduates of Rockwood Valley Middle School, Crestview Middle School (only some students who went to Ellisville Elementary), and Wildwood Middle School (only students who went to Green Pines ...
Blue Ridge Christian School - non-denominational Christian (co-ed) Cristo Rey Kansas City High School - Roman Catholic (co-ed) De la Salle Education Center - nonsectarian (co-ed)
Administration of primary and secondary public schools in the state is conducted by the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. [2] Education is compulsory from ages seven to seventeen in Missouri, commonly but not exclusively divided into three tiers: elementary school, middle school or junior high school, and high school.
Cleveland High School opened its doors in September 1966. [1] The Teen Learning Center was founded as an alternative high school in 1994. It was renamed the F.I. Denning Center of Technology and Careers in 2015 in honor of Dr. Frederick I. "Rick" Denning, who was the director of schools when it was founded.
After World War II, middle-class jobs and families migrated to the suburbs leaving behind predominantly low-income student enrollment in the Cleveland Public School system. [18] A long-term decline in population began in 1950. It was exacerbated in the 1960s and early 1970s by white flight and suburbanization.
As of spring 2016 the district had 3,700 students. 66% were black, 30% were white, and 4% were Hispanic and/or Asian. [5]As of 2016, Margaret Green Middle School had more than 496 students, with 51% of them being black and 43% of them being white. [7]