Trumann School District

Trumann School District (or Trumann Public Schools) is a public school district based in Trumann, Arkansas, United States. Trumann provides early childhood, elementary and secondary education to an average of 1,600 students with approximately 120 teachers (on a full time equivalent (FTE) basis) from its four schools at three facilities.

Trumann School District
Location
221 Pine Avenue
Trumann, Arkansas 72472-2700

United States
Coordinates35°40′24.1″N 90°31′3.0″W
District information
TypePublic (government funded)
GradesPK-12
SuperintendentMyra Graham
Accreditation(s)Arkansas Department of Education
Schools3 (1 high school, 1 middle school, 1 elementary school)
NCES District ID0500047[1]
Students and staff
Students1,613[1]
Teachers119.21[1]
Student–teacher ratio13.53[1]
Athletic conference4A Region 3
Other information
Websitewww.trumannwildcat.com

History

The Common School District consolidated into the Trumann district on July 1, 1986.[2]

Schools

The Trumann School District consists of the following schools:

  • Trumann High School (grades 9–12), located at 1620 W. Main, Trumann, Arkansas.
  • Trumann Intermediate School (grades 5–8), located at 221 Pine Avenue, Trumann, Arkansas.
  • Trumann Elementary School (PreKindergarten–4), located at 200 North Willow, Trumann, Arkansas.

All schools are accredited by the Arkansas Department of Education with the high school and intermediate schools accredited by AdvancED since 1963 and 1989, respectively.

gollark: You're talking about one *in the next 20 years*, which hasn't.
gollark: 1. that hasn't *happened* yet. You're generalizing from a literally nonexistent example.2. I think their regulation kind of goes in the wrong directions.
gollark: Anyway, my original meaning with the question (this is interesting too, please continue it if you want to) was more like this: Phones and whatnot require giant several-billion-$ investments in, say, semiconductor plants. For cutting-edge stuff there are probably only a few facilities in the world producing the chips involved, which require importing rare elements and whatnot all around the world. How are you meant to manage stuff at this scale with anarchy; how do you coordinate?
gollark: Which "capitalism" is a very rough shorthand for.
gollark: ... I'm not saying "full anarchocapitalism, no government", I said "somewhat government-regulated free markets".

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.