DeKalb County School District
DeKalb County School District | |
---|---|
Location | |
DeKalb County, Georgia | |
District information | |
Type | Suburban/Urban Public |
Grades | PK-12 |
Established | 1873 |
Superintendent | Dr. R. Stephen Green |
Accreditation | Southern Association of Colleges and Schools |
Schools |
83 Elementary schools 20 Middle schools 22 High schools 18 centers |
Students and staff | |
Students |
49,142 elementary school 22,647 middle school 29,290 high school 101,079 total |
Teachers | 8,500 (4,600 of whom are regular education teachers) |
Staff | 13,285 (non-teaching) |
Student-teacher ratio | 23 to 1 |
Other information | |
Website | www.dekalb.k12.ga.us |
The DeKalb County School District (DCSD) is a school district headquartered at 1701 Mountain Industrial Boulevard in unincorporated DeKalb County, Georgia, United States.[1] DCSD operates public schools in areas of DeKalb County that are not within the city limits of Atlanta and Decatur.
As of July 1, 2015, the District Superintendent was Dr. R. Stephen Green.[2] The system educates more than 101,000 students at 137 schools with more than 14,000 full-time employees and 6,000 teachers. The student-to-teacher ratio is 23:1. In 2005 the school system graduated over 5,000 students from high school. Of those students, 7.8% received a dual diploma, 79.4% received a college prep diploma and 12.8% received a vocational diploma. After graduation, 62% were eligible for Hope Scholarships. In 2011, the school system graduated 6,130 students.[3]
School Board members
Current School Board members:
- District 1 - Stan Jester
- District 2 - Marshall Orson[4]
- District 3 - Michael A. Erwin
- District 4 - James L. McMahan (Vice Chair)
- District 5 - Vickie Turner
- District 6 - Dr. Melvin Johnson (Chair)
- District 7 - Dr. Joyce A. Morley
- District 8 - Board super district eliminated as of 1/1/2015
- District 9 - Board super district eliminated as of 1/1/2015
History
Accreditation
On December 17, 2012, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools announced that it had downgraded the DeKalb County School District's status from "on advisement" to "on probation" and warned the school system that the loss of their accreditation was "imminent."[5]
On January 21, 2014, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools announced that it had upgraded the DeKalb County School District's status from "probation" to "accredited warned" which is below full accreditation status.[6]
Indictment
Former DeKalb County Schools Superintendent Crawford Lewis was indicted in 2012, along with former DeKalb County Schools Chief Operating Officer Pat Pope, and others, on criminal charges related to a school construction scandal. The indictment listed four counts of racketeering, as well as theft by taking and bribery.[7]
Shooting and hostage situation
On August 20, 2013, a shooting and hostage situation occurred at Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy, an elementary school in the district. A man with an AK-47 entered the school's front office and barricaded himself. He fired six shots at approaching police officers outside, who returned fire. Nobody was injured. The school's students were evacuated. Antoinette Tuff, a school bookkeeper, later received a call from President Obama praising her for her courage while talking to the shooter; police credited her calmness and kindness toward him with convincing him to surrender without shooting anyone.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15]
Schools and centers
Elementary schools
Zoned
- Allgood Elementary School (1955)
- Ashford Park Elementary (1955)
- Austin Elementary School (Dunwoody) (1975)[16]
- Avondale Elementary School (Avondale Estates) (1953)
- Bob Mathis Elementary School (1975)
- Bouie Elementary (1996)
- Briarlake Elementary (unincorporated) (1957)
- Briar Vista Elementary (1955)
- Brockett Elementary (1961)
- Browns Mill Elementary School (unincorporated) (1990)
- Canby Lane Elementary (1967)
- Murphey Candler Elementary School (unincorporated) (1969)
- Cedar Grove Elementary (1975)
- Chapel Hill Elementary (1967)
- Chesnut Charter Elementary School (Dunwoody) (formerly Chesnut Elementary,1969-1999, became charter in 2000)
- Clifton Elementary (1967)
- Columbia Elementary (1961)
- Dresden Elementary School (unincorporated) (1963)
- Dunaire Elementary School (1967)
- Dunwoody Elementary (Dunwoody) (2009)
- Eldridge Miller Elementary (1981) (formerly Mainstreet Elementary)
- Evansdale Elementary School (unincorporated) (1967)
- Fairington Elementary (1975)
- Fernbank Elementary (1958) (currently housed at Avondale Middle School, while original building is demolished and replaced with new building 2013–present)
- Flat Rock Elementary (2007)
- Flat Shoals Elementary (1966)
- Hambrick Elementary (1971)
- Narvie Harris Elementary School (1998)
- Hawthorne Elementary (1961)
- Henderson Mill Elementary (1965)
- Hightower Elementary School (Doraville) (1958)
- Huntley Hills Elementary School (unincorporated) (1964)
- Idlewood Elementary (1967)
- Indian Creek Elementary (1961)
- Jolly Elementary School (unincorporated, east of Clarkston, opened 1968)
- Kelley Lake Elementary (1963)
- Kingsley Elementary School (Dunwoody) (1971)
- Kittredge Magnet School
- Knollwood Elementary (1955)
- Laurel Ridge Elementary (1958)
- Livsey Elementary (1971)
- Marbut Elementary School (unincorporated) (1994)
- McLendon Elementary (1958)
- Meadowview Elementary (1961)
- Midvale Elementary (1961)
- Montclair Elementary (1967)
- Montgomery Elementary (1963)
- Oakcliff Elementary (1964)
- Oak Grove Elementary (1958)
- Oak View Elementary (2004)
- Panola Way Elementary School (unincorporated) (1987)
- Peachcrest Elementary (1961-2011)
- Pine Ridge Elementary (1988)
- Pleasantdale Elementary School (unincorporated) (1968)
- Princeton Elementary (2007)
- Rainbow Elementary (1970)
- Redan Elementary (1935)
- Cary Reynolds Elementary School (Doraville) (Sequoyah Elementary School 1961-1963 name change)[17]
- Rock Chapel Elementary School (unincorporated) (1969)
- Rockbridge Elementary School (unincorporated) (1972)
- Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy (2008)
- Rowland Elementary (1967)
- Sagamore Hills Elementary (1961)
- Shadow Rock Elementary (1991)
- Robert Shaw Theme School (Robert Shaw Elementary 1955-1969)
- Smoke Rise Elementary (1969)
- Snapfinger Elementary (1964)
- Stone Mill Elementary (1975)
- Stone Mountain Elementary School (1954)
- Stoneview Elementary School (unincorporated, southwest of Lithonia) (1963)
- Terry Mill Elementary (1958-1998)currently the Dekalb Elementary School of the Arts)
- The Museum School of Avondale Estates (2010)
- Toney Elementary (1953)
- Vanderlyn Elementary School (Dunwoody) (1973)
- Wadsworth Elementary (1958-2000 currently Wadsworth Magnet School)
- Woodridge Elementary (1975),
- Woodward Elementary (1961)
- Wynbrooke Elementary (2001)
Optional
- Oakcliff Traditional Theme School (unincorporated)
- DeKalb Elementary School of the Arts (2002)
Middle schools
Zoned
- Mary McLeod Bethune Middle School (unincorporated)
- Cedar Grove Middle School (unincorporated)
- Chamblee Middle School (Chamblee) (1997)
- Chapel Hill Middle School (unincorporated)
- Columbia Middle School (unincorporated)
- Druid Hills Middle School (Shamrock Middle School 1996-2011) (unincorporated)
- Freedom Middle School (unincorporated, opened January 8, 2001)[18]
- Henderson Middle School (unincorporated)
- Lithonia Middle School (Lithonia)
- Ronald McNair, Sr. Middle School (unincorporated)
- Miller Grove Middle School (unincorporated)
- Peachtree Charter Middle School (Dunwoody)
- Redan Middle School (unincorporated) (2003)[19]
- Salem Middle School (unincorporated)
- Sequoyah Middle School (Doraville)
- Stephenson Middle School (unincorporated) (1996)
- Stone Mountain Middle School (unincorporated, west of the city of Stone Mountain)
- Tucker Middle School (unincorporated) (2004)
Optional
High schools
Zoned
- Arabia Mountain High School
- Cedar Grove High School (unincorporated)[20]
- Chamblee Charter High School (Chamblee)
- Clarkston High School (unincorporated, south of City of Clarkston)[21]
- Columbia High School (unincorporated)[22]
- Cross Keys High School (Brookhaven, formerly unincorporated) (1957)[23]
- Druid Hills High School (unincorporated)
- Dunwoody High School (Dunwoody)
- Martin Luther King, Jr. High School (unincorporated)[24]
- Lakeside High School (unincorporated)
- Lithonia High School (unincorporated, west of the city of Lithonia, formerly within city limits)[25]
- Ronald McNair Sr. High School (unincorporated)[26]
- Miller Grove High School (unincorporated)[27]
- Redan High School (unincorporated) (1976)
- Southwest DeKalb High School (unincorporated)[28]
- Stephenson High School (unincorporated)[29]
- Stone Mountain High School (unincorporated, west of the city of Stone Mountain) (1976)[30]
- Towers High School (unincorporated)[31]
- Tucker High School (unincorporated)
Alternative
- DeKalb School of the Arts (unincorporated)
- Elizabeth Andrews High School (unincorporated)[32]
Centers
Alternative
- Coralwood Diagnostic Center (unincorporated)
- DeKalb Alternative School (unincorporated)
- Destiny Academy of Excellence (unincorporated)
- DeKalb Early College Academy (unincorporated, south of the city of Stone Mountain)
- DeKalb High School of Technology - North (within the new city limits of Dunwoody est. December 1, 2008)
- DeKalb High School of Technology - South (unincorporated, southeast of the city of Decatur)
- DeKalb Transition Academy (formerly Wesley Chapel Elementary School)
- Eagle Woods Academy
- Fernbank Science Center (unincorporated)[33]
- International Student Center (unincorporated)
- The Jim Cherry Teacher Center (now part of the Georgia Learning Resources System (glrs), Metro East Center)
- Margaret Harris Comprehensive School (unincorporated, previously the Margaret Harris High School for Exceptional Children)[34]
- Shadow Rock Center (unincorporated, south of the city of Lithonia)
- Warren Technical Center (unincorporated, east of the city of Chamblee, formerly Warren Elementary School)
Partnerships
- Children's Healthcare of Atlanta
- DeKalb Truancy School
- Father Flanagan Girls and Boys Town
- Gateway to College Academy (located on Georgia Perimeter College's Clarkston Campus)
Former schools
Elementary schools
- Atherton Elementary (1964-2011)
- Forrest Hills Elementary School, 1954-2004 (The Museum School 2012-current)
- Glen Haven Elementary (1943-2011)
- Gresham Park Elementary (1958-2011)
- Heritage Elementary School, 1968-19?? ( Heritage School ????-2010, Globe Academy Charter 2013-current)
- Hooper Alexander Elementary School, 1935-2008 (building intact)
- Kittredge Elementary School 1958-1974 (4th-6th grades only 1969-74) (open campus West High school 1975-1988, Kittredge Magnet School 1989-2008, International Student Center 2008-current)
- Leslie J. Steele Elementary School, 1951-2006 (demolished and site reconstructed as Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy 2008)
- Margaret Harris Elementary School, 1967-1988 (currently Margaret Harris Comprehensive School, since ????)
- Medlock Elementary School, 1951-2011 (The International School private academy, ten-year lease for the building 2012-current)
- Midway Elementary (1958-2015)
- Nancy Creek Elementary School, 1970-2008 (Kittredge Magnet School 2008-current)
- Rehoboth Elementary School, 1963-1979 (Dekalb Schools employee training and records center 1980-1998, The William Bradley Bryant Center, 1999-current)
- Robert Shaw Elementary School, 1955-1969 (Robert Shaw student Diagnostic Testing and Instructional center 1971-1997, Robert Shaw Theme School 1998-current)
- Shallowford Elementary School, 1968-1997 (Chamblee Middle School 1997-2006, demolished in July 2014)[35]
- Sky Haven Elementary (1955-2011) (property held/maintained for school system's possible future use)
- Tilson Elementary (1958-2008)
- Tucker Elementary School, 1955-1983 (Tucker Recreation Center, 1985-current)
- W.D. Thomson Elementary School, 1939-1975 (demolished 1976)
- Wesley Chapel Elementary School, 1953-1979 (currently Dekalb Transition Academy, since 19??)
- Jim Cherry Elementary School 1949-1975 (North Dekalb Mental Health Center, 1976-1988, Seigakuin International Japanese School 1990-2003, PATH Academy charter school 2005-current)
- Northwoods Elementary School 1954-1984 (Yeshivah Hebrew Orthodox High School 1986-current)
- Skyland Elementary School 1948-1988 (Georgia Dept. of Human Resources, Center for Vital Records 1991-current)
- Brookhaven Elementary School 1948-1975 (DeKalb Public Library, North Druid Hills branch annex 1976-1985, Brookhaven Boys' and Girls' Club 1985-current)
Middle schools
- Avondale Middle School (unincorporated, adjacent to the city of Avondale Estates) 2000-2011 (currently housing Fernbank Elementary School 2013–present)
High schools
- Avondale High School (unincorporated, adjacent to the city of Avondale Estates) 1955-2011[36]
- Briarcliff High School, 1962-1987 ( 1988-2008 Dekalb School of the Arts and Open Campus High School)
- Bruce Street High School, 1938-1968
- Hamilton High School, 1924-1969 (currently Hamilton Recreation Center)
- Henderson High School 1970-1996 (currently Henderson Middle School)
- Peachtree High School, 1968-1988 (Peachtree Jr High School 1988-2002; demolished, site reconstructed as Peachtree Charter Middle School 2008)
- Shamrock High School, 1967-1996 (Shamrock Middle School 1996-2011, name changed to Druid Hills Middle School 2011-current)
District facilities
- Administrative and Instructional Complex (unincorporated area near Stone Mountain) —The building complex was originally built as an American Fare. After this closed, DeKalb County School District bought the property. The district renovated the original building, converting commercial spaces into educational and office spaces. The building served for a short time as the district's alternative high school before becoming the Administrative and Instructional Complex.
- The East DeKalb Campus (unincorporated area near Stone Mountain)
- The Sam Moss Service Center (unincorporated area near Tucker)
- The William Bradley Bryant Center (unincorporated area near Decatur)[37]
Athletics
The district offers 17 athletic programs and earned 253 state championships dating back to 1938; the majority of the titles came from track and field and wrestling. The county provides five athletic stadiums that include:
Stadium | Year Constructed | Seating Capacity | Location | Additional Information |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adams Stadium | 1962 | 6,500 (one side of field) | Unincorporated - adjacent to the old Briarcliff High School Building | |
Avondale Stadium | 1958 | 6,500 (one side of field) | Unincorporated - adjacent to City of Avondale Estates | |
James R. Hallford Stadium | 1968 | 15,600 (both sides of field) | Unincorporated - adjacent to City of Clarkston on the Clarkston Campus of Georgia Perimeter College | Formerly named Memorial Stadium |
North DeKalb Stadium | 1962 | 6,500 (one side of field) | Within the city limits of Chamblee | |
Panthersville Stadium | 1968 | 8,500 | Unincorporated - adjacent to the Georgia Perimeter College Decatur Campus |
See also
References
- ↑ "Welcome to DCCS." DeKalb County School System. Retrieved on May 5, 2009.
- ↑ http://www.dekalb.k12.ga.us/superintendent
- ↑ DeKalb County Schools
- ↑ DeKalb election results: Mixed message on school board | Get Schooled
- ↑ "DeKalb school district in 'conflict and crisis,' put on probation by accreditation agency."." The Atlanta Journal and Constitution. December 17, 2012. Retrieved on December 19, 2012]." The Atlanta Journal and Constitution. December 17, 2012. Retrieved on December 19, 2012.
- ↑ http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/local/dekalb-school-system-get-accredited-warned-status/ncwTf/
- ↑ New indictment for former DeKalb Superintendent | www.wsbtv.com
- ↑ Barrow, Bill (August 20, 2013). "Official: Suspect in custody at Ga. school". Associated Press. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
- ↑ "All students OK after shot fired at Georgia school". cnn.com. August 20, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
- ↑ "Official: Suspect In Custody In Elementary School Shooting". CBS Atlanta. August 20, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
- ↑ King, Michael (August 20, 2013). "Shooting suspect in custody at Georgia school". USA Today. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
- ↑ ""I'm proud of you, it's a good thing you are giving up" Antoinette Tuff puts her life on the line to end Georgia elementary school standoff". cnn.com. August 21, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
- ↑ Botelho, Greg and Vivian Kuo, and Josh Levs (August 22, 2013). "Antoinette Tuff hailed as 'true hero' for handling Georgia school gunman". cnn.com. Retrieved August 24, 2013.
- ↑ "Georgia school shooting: Antoinette Tuff hailed as hero - CNN.com". CNN. August 23, 2013.
- ↑ "Obama phones Ga. woman credited with preventing school shooting". Fox News. August 22, 2013.
- ↑ Austin: Home
- ↑ Schools and Centers :: DeKalb County Schools
- ↑ Schools and Centers :: DeKalb County Schools
- ↑ Redan Middle School
- ↑ Cedar Grove HS
- ↑ Clarkston High School
- ↑ CHS Home
- ↑ Cross Keys High School, Home of the Indians
- ↑ Martin Luther King, Jr. High School
- ↑ http://www.dekalb.k12.ga.us/lithonia/
- ↑ McNair High School
- ↑ Miller Grove High School
- ↑ S.W. DeKalb High School
- ↑ Stephenson HS
- ↑ Stone Mountain High School
- ↑ Towers High School
- ↑ Elizabeth Andrews High School
- ↑ Fernbank Science Center - Where Science Becomes an Adventure
- ↑ Margaret Harris Center
- ↑ "Finally. Demolition begins on old Shallowford school". Dunwoody Crier. July 22, 2014. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- ↑ DeKalb County Schools
- ↑ "Schools and Centers." DeKalb County School System. Retrieved on September 18, 2012. "Admin. and Instructional Complex 1701 Mountain Industrial Boulevard Stone Mountain, GA 30083" and "5839 Memorial Drive Stone Mountain, GA 30083" and "1780 Montreal Road Tucker, GA 30084" and "2652 Lawrenceville Highway Decatur, GA 30033"
External links
Coordinates: 33°49′57″N 84°11′43″W / 33.83250°N 84.19528°W