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In a unanimous vote on Tuesday, Pasco County School board members approved the addition of three four-day weekends, or 'mini-breaks' to the 2024-25 student calendar.
As of the 2023-24 school year, there were 100 schools in Pasco County Schools: 48 elementary schools, 15 middle schools, 15 high schools, 1 middle/high school, 2 educational centers, 3 eSchools, 2 combination schools, and 14 charter schools.
The Pasco School District No. 1 was formed on January 10, 1885, with one teacher and no permanent building. The first school in Pasco was constructed later in the year and was followed by a second schoolhouse in 1888. The school district was accredited by the Washington State Board of Education on June 7, 1910, and had 475 students at the time. [8]
The construction of these two schools wouldn’t be possible without voters approving a $195.5 million bond measure earlier this year. Harvest View will be Pasco’s third comprehensive high school.
With new schools opening and students still recovering from pandemic-era learning losses, Pasco voters will have some big decisions to make about their school board’s leadership.
Pasco County Schools This page was last edited on 27 March 2011, at 19:50 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4. ...
Students from Pasco’s eight middle schools and high schools led the way in choosing the Lobos as the future school’s mascot, with shades of greens, grays and blues.
The school, designated as High School FFF in Pasco County Schools' long-range plans, was named Anclote High School by vote of the Pasco School Board in September 2008. [3] Anclote High School opened in August 24, 2009 to relieve crowding at J.W. Mitchell High School and Gulf High School.