Anniston City Schools

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TypePublic
MottoEmpowering our students to win
GradesPK-12[1]
Established1909; 116 years ago (1909)
Anniston City Schools
Address
4804 McClellan Boulevard
, Calhoun County, AL, 36206
United States
District information
TypePublic
MottoEmpowering our students to win
GradesPK-12[1]
Established1909; 116 years ago (1909)
SuperintendentDr. D. Ray Hill
Schools5
NCES District ID0100090[1]
Students and staff
Students1,898 ('20-'21)[1]
Teachers100.34 ('20-'21)[1]
Staff98.23 ('20-'21)[1]
Student–teacher ratio18.92 ('20-'21)[1]
Other information
WebsiteOfficial website

Anniston City Schools is the public school district of Anniston, Alabama. Anniston City Schools serves 1,898 students and employs 100 teachers and 98 staff as of the 2020–2021 school year. The district includes three elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school.[1]

Anniston City Schools consists of five schools:[1]

  • Cobb Preparatory Academy (PK-K)
  • Golden Springs Elementary School (1-5)
  • Randolph Park Elementary School (1-5)
  • Anniston Middle School (6-8)
  • Anniston High School (9-12)

The district's Tenth Street Elementary School was closed in 2021.[2]

School Board

Name Position
Robert L. Houston President
Dr. Mary Harrington Vice-President
Becky Brown    Member
Joan Frazier Member
Trudy Munford Member

Failing schools

Statewide testing ranks the schools in Alabama. Those in the bottom six percent are listed as "failing." As of early 2018, Anniston High School was included in this category.[3]

Continuing Improvement Program

Anniston City Schools have adopted a Continuing Improvement Program to monitor Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) under the No Child Left Behind initiative.[4] For school year 2010–2011, the High School made adequate yearly progress in math but not in reading. In grades 6 through 8 it was the other way round. In grades 3 through 5 the goals were not met in either reading or math.[5]

Five-year strategic plan

The system has a five-year strategic plan designed to address perceived shortcomings such as poor facilities, lack of discipline, lack of community support, inadequate funding, and an emphasis on athletics at the expense of academic progress. The top priorities were seen as improving test scores, boosting community and business involvement, and improving relationships between parents and teachers.[6]

Sports

Anniston High School's basketball coach since 1997 has been Schuessler L. Ware, named Alabama State 4-A Coach of the Year for 2011.[7]

Discipline

References

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