Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science

The Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science (MSMS) is Mississippi's only public residential high school for academically gifted students and is located in Columbus, Mississippi, United States on the campus of the Mississippi University for Women. A member of the National Consortium for Secondary STEM Schools (NCSSS),[4] it is a statewide public magnet school.

Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science
Location
,
39701

United States
Information
TypeResidential public high school
Established1987
NCES District ID2801194[1]
NCES School ID280119401201[2]
Executive DirectorGermain McConnell, Ph.D.
Grades11–12
GenderCoeducational
Number of students220 (approx.)
Color(s)Blue and white          
NicknameBlue Waves
AccreditationAdvancED[3]
AffiliationsNCSSS
Websitewww.themsms.org

Tenth-grade students are selected to attend through a competitive application process that includes standardized test scores, a written application, and an interview. The school enrolls students in the last two years of high school graduating over 100 students each year. The class of 2016 produced 11 National Merit Semifinalists.[5] While the main academic focus of MSMS is mathematics and science, humanities, particularly history, literature, and art are also emphasized.

History

Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science (MSMS) was founded in 1987 by appropriations from the Mississippi Legislature and was the fourth public, residential high school for academically gifted students created in the United States.[6]

As a public, residential high school, drawing students from all over the state, MSMS has occasionally struggled for existence. The property tax has been the sole form of finance for most schools in Mississippi.[7] However, MSMS which draws students from all over the state, cannot levy a millage tax as a source of funding.[8] It relies on grants as well as state, student, and alumni contributions.

Starting in 2008, the Mississippi Legislature required MSMS and its sister school, the Mississippi School of the Arts, to charge students $500 per semester for room and board costs, making them the only public schools in the state that charge students to attend. However, if a student is eligible for free or reduced lunch in their home district, then this fee is waived.[9]

Notable alumni

  • Elizabeth Wayne (biomedical engineer), TED Fellow
gollark: Your database is very impressive.
gollark: Hmm. Guess they're just apioform.
gollark: The boss will be blamed by the boss² for "removing checks and balances" or something even if it was a generally good change and even if the original procedure wouldn't have prevented it.
gollark: Imagine that some bad database-migration-related thing happens now.
gollark: Now, imagine that somehow, despite the challenges of getting said nontechnical boss² to do anything, they convince them successfully to remove the procedure or make it easier.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.