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Central Stickney School District 110; Chicago Heights School District 170; Chicago Ridge School District 127-5; Cicero School District 99; Community Consolidated School District 59; Community Consolidated School District 146; Community Consolidated School District 168; Cook County School District 130; Country Club Hills School District 160
An August 27, 2015 article by the Chicago Tribune refers to the Archdiocese of Chicago Office of Catholic Schools as the largest private school system in the United States. [ 1 ] A wave of school closures after the 2014-2015 school year caused over 200 employees to change jobs and over 1,200 pupils to change schools.
Middle school. Chicago Heights Middle School - Its current middle school facility had its groundbreaking in 2018 and it was scheduled to open in 2020. It had a cost of $40,000,000. [4] Elementary schools. Garfield Elementary School; Grant Elementary School; Greenbriar Elementary School; Jefferson Elementary School; Kennedy Elementary School
The school opened as a neighborhood high school, with most of the student body being from surrounding neighborhoods (which consisted of Kenwood, Grand Boulevard and Oakland) and the former Forrestville High School. [6] [7] King became a selective enrollment school during the 2000–2001 school year and was renamed Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr ...
Palos Heights School District 128; Palos School District 118; Park Forest-Chicago Heights School District 163; Park Ridge-Niles School District 64; Pennoyer School District 79; Pleasantdale School District 107; Posen-Robbins School District 143½; Prospect Heights School District 23; Proviso Township High Schools District 209
A second Chicago Heights high school, Bloom Trail, was established in 1976 to offset overcrowding. [4] Since 1995, however, Bloom and Bloom Trail have shared the same sports programs, drawing from over 3,000 students [5] [6] in grades 9 to 12. The present Bloom High School building, erected during the Great Depression, was named to the National ...
The new plan called for the first school to accept coed classes until the boys' school was ready, about four years after the school for women was open. The Dominican Sisters of Springfield, Illinois agreed to oversee and staff the new school in 1955. Ground breaking occurred on January 6, 1957, and the school opened in September, 1958.
In 2016 the district had over 2,000 students. [3] In 2019 the district had 1,838 students. [4]In 2019 a board member resigned but then remained on the school board, and there was a political controversy over the board's internal management. [4]