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Madison County Schools is a school district in Madison County, Alabama, United States, headquartered in an unincorporated area, bordering Huntsville. [1]Communities in the district include: Gurley, Harvest, Hazel Green, Meridianville, Moores Mill, New Hope, Owens Cross Roads, New Market, Redstone Arsenal, and Triana.
The Alabama Education Association (AEA) is a statewide professional organization that represents public school employees in the state of Alabama. It is based in the state capital of Montgomery . The AEA is the largest education association in Alabama and is an advocate organization that leads the movement for excellence in education and is the ...
St. Peter's Regional School – Closed in 2019, [41] with 42 students; was the final remaining Catholic school in Sullivan County; school became an early learning center in 2016 after an earlier plan to close the school was canceled; the Catholic schools in closest proximity to St. Peters are Our Lady of Mount Carmel Elementary School in ...
National Education Union; National Teachers Association; National Tertiary Education Union; Nebraska State Education Association [1] Nevada State Education Association [1] Newark Teachers Association; NEA-New Hampshire [1] New Jersey Education Association [1] NEA-New Mexico [1] New South Wales Teachers Federation; New York City Teachers Union ...
Alabama workers are not alone in their increased interest in union representation. The EPI report found that in 2017 nearly half (48%) of all non-union workers in the U.S. would like to unionize.
School District Location Schools Students Faculty (FTE) Ratio Per Pupil Spending Alabaster City: Alabaster: 5 6,187 354.38 17:1 $10,334 Albertville City
The current Mobile County Public School System can trace its beginnings to the Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County, created by the Alabama Legislature through an act passed on January 10, 1826. [8] This was the first education board created in Alabama. [9] Barton Academy in downtown Mobile.
Twenty-three schools comprise the district, including 12 elementary schools, 5 middle schools, 3 high schools, and 3 campuses dedicated to specialty education: one for students with special needs and those receiving alternative education, a school for students studying performing arts, and a career technical facility for grades 9 – 12.