Anna Independent School District

Anna Independent School District
Location
501 S Sherley Ave.
Anna, Texas[1]

ESC Region 10[2]
USA
Coordinates 33°20′43″N 96°32′53″W / 33.34528°N 96.54806°W / 33.34528; -96.54806
District information
Type Independent school district
Grades Pre-K through 12
Superintendent Pete Slaughter
Schools 5 (2015-2016)[1]
District ID 4808340[1]
Students and staff
Students 2,298(2010-11)[2]
Teachers 169.18 (2009-10)[1] (on full-time equivalent (FTE) basis)
Student-teacher ratio 13.28 (2009-10)[1]
Athletic conference

2016-2017 UIL: Class 4A Division 1 (Football)

Class 4A (All other UIL Sports)
District mascot Coyotes[3]
Colors           Purple, White[3]
Other information
TEA District Accountability Rating for 2011-12 Recognized[4]
Website Anna ISD

Anna Independent School District is a public school district based in Anna, Texas (USA). In addition to Anna, the district serves parts of Weston as well as the community of Westminster.

History

Anna ISD's original colors were Blue and Gold until the 1950s, when TCU donated old uniforms to AHS.

Upon the closure of Westminster ISD the 1989-1990 school year, students from Westminster were annexed into Anna and Van Alstyne ISDs. Conversely, prior to the 2004-2005 school year Melissa ISD only educated students through grade 8, so students in that district went to high school at either McKinney High School (before Fall 2000), McKinney North High School (after Fall 2000) or Anna High School.

Due to the district's location along U.S. 75, it has outgrown several schools in its history.

1985- The current Administration Building opened as Anna High School.

1973- The northwest building of the Early Childhood Center opened as a K-8 campus.

1988- The Special Programs Center opened as Anna High School.

1994- The southwest building of the Early Childhood Center opened as a K-5 campus.

1995- The southeast building, a gymnasium, of the Early Childhood Center opened for grades K-8.

1996- The northeast building of the Early Childhood Center opened housing PK and the PK-8 cafetorium.

2000- The current Anna Middle School opened as Anna High School. AMS moved to the 1988 facility, while Anna Elementary School took over the former middle school building.

2005- Joe K. Bryant Elementary opened as a 1-4 campus. Central Campus opened housing PK-K and 5-6 at the current ECC campus.

2007- Sue E. Rattan Elementary opened, with both elementary schools housing PK-5, closing Central Campus.

2011- The current Anna High School opened as a 9-12 campus. AMS moved to its current building and the Special Programs Center is created in its current home.

2013- The Early Childhood Center opened as a PK-K campus, with both elementary schools housing grades 1-5.

A bond election passed in May 2016 to allow for the complexion of AHS - bringing its capacity up to 1800 - add classrooms to AMS, build Middle School #2 and Elementary Schools #3 and #4, among other facility improvements.

At build-out, Anna ISD will have 4 1800-capacity high schools, 8 750-capacity middle schools, and 16 750-capacity elementary schools.

Finances

As of the 2010-2011 school year, the appraised valuation of property in the district was $504,279,000.[2] The maintenance tax rate was $0.104 and the bond tax rate was $0.050 per $100 of appraised valuation.[2]

Academic achievement

In 2011, the school district was rated "recognized" by the Texas Education Agency.[4] Thirty-five percent of districts in Texas in 2011 received the same rating.[5] No state accountability ratings will be given to districts in 2012.[6] A school district in Texas can receive one of four possible rankings from the Texas Education Agency: Exemplary (the highest possible ranking), Recognized, Academically Acceptable, and Academically Unacceptable (the lowest possible ranking).

Historical district TEA accountability ratings[4]

Schools

In the 2015-2016 school year the district had students in six schools.[2]

Regular instructional
Alternative instructional

See also

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.