Kermit Independent School District

Kermit Independent School District
Address
601 South Poplar
Kermit, Texas, (Winkler County) 79745
 United States  Texas
Information
Type Public
Motto "E Pluribus Unum"
("Out of Many, One")
Established 1928
Authority Texas Education Agency
Superintendent Bill Boyd
Enrollment 1235 (2009)
  Grade 3 94
  Grade 4 90
  Grade 5 93
  Grade 6 96
  Grade 7 94
  Grade 8 76
  Grade 9 96
  Grade 10 89
  Grade 11 88
  Grade 12 87
Color(s)      Maroon      Gold
Publication Jacket Jabber
Website http://kisd.esc18.net/

Kermit Independent School District is a public school district located in Kermit, Texas (USA) that serves students in northeastern Winkler County and encompasses 398.09 square miles . The City of Kermit is located just under the southeast corner of New Mexico at the intersection of Texas State Highways 18, 115, and 302, and is approximately 46 miles west of Odessa.[1] The enrollment of the district was 1235 at the beginning of the 2010–2011 school year.

In 2009, the school district was rated "academically acceptable" by the Texas Education Agency.[2]

The district received national attention in January 2015 after a nine-year-old boy was controversially suspended because he "told a classmate he could make him disappear with a ring forged in fictional Middle Earth’s Mount Doom." The same boy had already been suspended on two previous occasions, which were also questioned by some in the public.[3]


Schools

Kermit ISD has three campuses:

References

External links

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