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Pages in category "Girls' schools in Arkansas" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. ... Mount St. Mary Academy (Little Rock, Arkansas)
Diocesan School for Girls can refer to: Ireland. The Diocesan School for Girls, Dublin, merged with The High School, Dublin in 1974; New Zealand. Diocesan School for Girls (Auckland) Waikato Diocesan School, Hamilton; South Africa. Diocesan School for Girls, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape; St. Mary's Diocesan School for Girls, Kloof, KwaZulu-Natal
Arkansas Department of Education: Schools: 4: NCES District ID: 0511880 [1] Students and staff; Students: 2,090 [1] Teachers: 147.52 (on FTE basis) [1] Student–teacher ratio: 14.17 [1] District mascot: Scrappers: Colors Orange Black: Other information; Federal Funding: Title I A Title II A Title VI (REAP) Website: scrappers.k12.ar.us
The high school is administered by the Nashville Public School District. In the 2006–07 school year, Nashville High School had 43 teachers and a student enrollment of 390, with a student/teacher ratio of 9:1. [26] In 2010, the Nashville Junior High School Quiz Bowl team won the National Championship in Quiz Bowl.
St. Peter's Catholic School – Grades Preschool through 6 – The first school in Arkansas for black children to be established, [41] was established in 1889 by the pastor of St. Joseph Church, John Michael Lucey, as the Colored Industrial Institute and in 1897 became St. Peter Academy a.k.a. St. Peter High School.
Fayetteville Female Seminary, established in 1839 by Sophia Sawyer, was a school for girls in Fayetteville, Arkansas.It offered quality education for both white and Cherokee women at a time when women's access to schooling was limited and segregated schooling was common.
As a private school, Diocesan School receives little funding from the government and charges parents of students tuition fees to cover costs. As of 2022, the school tuition fees for domestic students (i.e. New Zealand citizens and residents) are approximately $24,785 for day students in Years 1 to 6 and $21,000 for day students in Years 7 to 13 ...
In 1866, it was renamed Diocesan Female Training & Industrial Schools. Because of financial problems, the school had to restrict its services solely to orphans and destitute girls. In 1869, Diocesan Home and Orphanage [ 15 ] was founded to admit both boys and girls, and occupied the building at the corner of Eastern Street and Bonham Road.