Palmyra-Macedon Central School District

The Palmyra-Macedon Central School District is a public school district in New York State that serves slightly under 2000 students in the villages and towns of Palmyra and Macedon in Wayne County with a staff of 385 employees (54% teaching staff, 43% support staff, 4% administrative staff). [1]

Palmyra-Macedon Central School District
Location
Palmyra and Macedon New York
United States
District information
TypePublic
MottoRespect, Responsibility, Caring, and Citizenship -- The Pal-Mac Way is EVERY DAY!
GradesK-12
Established1950
SuperintendentRobert R. Ike, Ed.D.
Schools4
Budget$33,416,270 operating budget for 2011-2012
Students and staff
Students~2000
Teachers208
Staff385 (including teachers)
Athletic conferenceSection V (NYSPHSAA)
District mascotRed Raiders (Native American, not pirate)
ColorsRed and White          
Other information
Websitehttp://www.palmaccsd.org/index.cfm

The average class size is 17-19 students (high school), and 21 in lower grades.[2]

Robert R. Ike, Ed.D is the Superintendent of Schools and Ralph Brongo is the Assistant Superintendent for Business. Ryan Pacette is the Assistant Superintendent for Instruction.

Board of education

The Board of Education (BOE) consists of 9 members who serve rotating 3-year terms. Elections are held each May for board members and to vote on the School District Budget.

As of June 2013, John R. Kratzert is president of the Board.

Schools

The district operates one elementary, one intermediate, one middle and one high school.

Elementary schools

  • Palmyra-Macedon Primary School (Palmyra) (PK-2)
  • Palmyra-Macedon Intermediate School (Macedon) (3-5)

Middle school

  • Palmyra-Macedon Middle School (6-8)

High school

Performance

The district's 94.3% graduation rate exceeds the State Standard of 55%. Approximately 73% of students continue to post-secondary education; 40% of the class of 2012 enrolled in four-year colleges.[2]

gollark: ???
gollark: Why are they inefficient, then, and why aren't better ones selected for?
gollark: That's just a name for it, not an explanation.
gollark: I don't think it actually has that much effect on the lower level functioning of the civil service etc.
gollark: Infrastructure projects run over budget and over time all the time for no apparent reason.

References


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