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Posen-Robbins Elementary School District 143-5; Prairie-Hills Elementary School District 144; Prospect Heights School District 23; Rhodes School District 84-5; Ridgeland School District 122; River Forest School District 90; River Grove School District 85-5; River Trails School District 26; Riverside School District 96; Rosemont Elementary ...
Enders-Salk Elementary School Schaumburg: 508 31 16.4 Kindergarten 6th grade Everett Dirksen Elementary School Schaumburg: 426 25.8 16.5 Kindergarten 6th grade Fairview Elementary School Hoffman Estates: 526 29 18.1 Kindergarten 6th grade Fredrick Nerge Elementary School Roselle: 693 37 18.7 Kindergarten 6th grade Hanover Highlands Elementary ...
Community Consolidated School District 59 (CCSD59) is a school district based in Elk Grove Village, Illinois. The school district serves most of Elk Grove Village while serving parts of Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, and Des Plaines. The district has 11 elementary schools, 3 junior high schools, and an early learning
The following is a list of school districts in Illinois.As of July 1, 2023, there were 852 public school districts, including 368 elementary districts, 97 high school districts, 386 unit districts, and one Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice district, and two cooperative high schools.
The student-to-teacher ratio is lower than the state average, at 13:1. The district has 70 full-time counselors on staff. The student body at the schools served by Richardson Independent School District is 30% White, 22.4% Black, 6.9% Asian or Asian/Pacific Islander, 37.3% Hispanic/Latino, 0.3% American Indian or Alaska Native, and 0.1% Native ...
Leggee Elementary School (grades K-5) Reed Road Campus in Lake in the Hills. Henry Marlowe Middle School (grades 6–8) Henry Marlowe Middle School was opened in 2005. Its school mascot is the Mustang, and the school colors are black, white, and silver. Hannah Martin Elementary School (grades 3–5) May Chesak Elementary School (grades K-2)
Public school teacher was also the most common occupation for black women in Chicago, who were treated by CPS as second-class job candidates: qualified black high school teachers worked in elementary schools or as substitutes; some could not get jobs at all. [37] Teachers came from a shifting mix of white-collar and blue-collar families. [38]
In the late 1980s, Tripp Middle School was built serving grades 3–5, at which point Pritchett Elementary served only grades K-2. Aptakisic School was then a junior high serving grades 6, 7, and 8. By 1994, Meridian Middle School was built to handle grade 5 and 6, while Tripp Elementary School became an elementary school serving K-4, alongside ...