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Legacy Traditional Schools [108] (Northwest Tucson) Leman Academy of Excellence [109] (Central Tucson, East Tucson, Marana, Oro Valley) MASSA Academy of Math & Science [110] (Desert Sky, Prince, South Mountain) Mexicayotl Academy of Excellence [111] Mountain Rose Academy; Open Doors Community School [112] Pima Rose Academy; Satori School [113]
Leman Academy of Excellence, an award winning tuition-free classical charter school founded by Dr. Kevin Leman. [11] Math and Science Success Academy, [12] elementary school, sister school of the Academy of Math and Science; Presidio School Tucson, [13] a national Blue Ribbon elementary, middle and high school
Suffolk Hills Catholic High School, Tucson (1971–90; reverted to the Immaculate Heart High School name) Vicki A. Romero High School , Phoenix (2012) West High School , Phoenix (1983, reopened 1985 as Metro Tech High School )
Academy of Tucson is a public charter school in Tucson, Arizona. In 1986, it was founded as a private high school. It became a charter school in 1999 and added the elementary and middle schools in 2003. The school has three campuses; elementary, middle, and high school located on the East side of Tucson. Wendi Allardice is the district ...
Southern Arizona Community Academy is a nontraditional high school. SACA has two library-setting classrooms — the West Classroom, which focuses on languages and social studies, and the East Classroom, which focuses on mathematics, science, and technology. Upon enrollment, students are placed into courses based on individual needs.
Amphitheater Public Schools, also known as Amphi or District 10, is the third largest public school district in Tucson, Arizona, in terms of enrollment, with about 13,500 students and a staff of about 2000 employees [1] Amphi was established on July 3, 1893.
Tucson Unified School District (TUSD) is the largest school district of Tucson, Arizona, in terms of enrollment. Dr. Gabriel Trujillo is the superintendent, appointed on September 12, 2017, by the Governing Board. [2] As of 2016, TUSD had more than 47,670 students.
The high school was founded in 1986 in rented space at Christ Community Church, with 23 9th- and 10th-grade students and seven faculty members. It moved to the El Camino Baptist Church campus on East Speedway Boulevard in 1991 as its enrollment approached 100. It was expanded with a middle school in 2000 and elementary school in 2004.