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The following is a list of the schools operated by the Duval County School Board, d/b/a Duval County Public Schools. The list is currently limited to high schools and middle schools . Most of the schools listed are in Jacksonville, Florida , the county seat and its largest city by orders of magnitude.
Renaissance Charter School (Central Palm, Cypress, Palms West, Summit, Wellington, West Palm Beach) Seagull Academy Somerset Academy Inc. (Boca East, Boca Middle, Canyons Middle/High, JFK, Lakes, Wellington)
DCPS has 163 regular-attendance schools as of the 2015-16 school year: 102 elementary schools, 24 middle schools, 1 K-6 school, 2 K-8 schools, 2 6-12 schools and 19 high schools. The district also has an adult education system through its Bridge to Success program and Parent Academy, six dedicated ESE schools, as well as a hospital/homebound ...
In 1996 Seaside Neighborhood School was established. It was Florida's first charter school. [22] The school initially consisted of 50 students and one classroom. In 1998, architect Richard Gibbs designed three white buildings which became the school's site. [23]
For the 2022-23 school year the state appropriated $195,768,743 to charter schools; $493,626 has already been designated for Jax Classical this year, a school that opened just three years ago.
Seaside Heights officials want to put a school closure plan before voters, but some residents won't be eligible to vote.
The total does not include charter schools, which numbered 13 for the 2009-2010 school year. Charter schools operate under contract to the Duval County School Board and follow the curriculum and rules of the DCSB. They are publicly funded and non-sectarian; most are oriented to help students "at risk".
Seaside Park's children attend Lavallette or Toms River schools for elementary school, and then go to Central for the upper grades. About 14,500 students attend Toms River Regional schools.