Jump to content

School District of Lee County (Florida)

Coordinates: 26°20′06″N 81°46′29″W / 26.3350839°N 81.7748082°W / 26.3350839; -81.7748082
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Greenman (talk | contribs) at 20:15, 20 August 2023 (Restored revision 1170618300 by Donkey3sauce (talk): Fully revert vandalism). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

School District of Lee County
File:LCSD.svg
Address
2855 Colonial Boulevard
Fort Myers
, Florida, 33966
United States
Coordinates26°20′06″N 81°46′29″W / 26.3350839°N 81.7748082°W / 26.3350839; -81.7748082
District information
TypePublic
GradesPreK–12[1]
NCES District ID1201080[1]
Students and staff
Students94,927[1]
Teachers5,156.15 (FTE)[1]
Staff5,951.36 (FTE)[1]
Student–teacher ratio18.41[1]
Other information
Websitewww.leeschools.net

The School District of Lee County manages public education in Lee County, Florida. As of the 2019–20 school year, there were 95,647 students attending 119 schools in the district, which had an operating budget of $1.327 billion.[2]

The District school choice system is an open-enrollment system for school assignments and goes through the Student Assignment Office. A lottery process is used to assign students to schools when the number of applicants for a school exceeds the number of available seats. Students’ applications are assigned random numbers to determine the order in which their applications will be considered in the assignment process.[3]

Integration

While Brown v. Board of Education outlawed segregated public schools in 1954, Lee County opted to ignore the ruling. In 1964, a student named Rosalind Blalock attempted to enroll in Fort Myers High School, but was denied admission to the whites-only school. A court case filed on her behalf by the NAACP resulted in a court order that forced Lee County to begin integrating the public schools. Prior to that time, Lee maintained a system that was separate but not equal for minority students. The district proceeded, first by integrating the teachers, then the elementary schools, and finally the high schools. In 1969, traditionally black Dunbar High School was closed, and students were reassigned to various white high schools around the county. The situation was often tense, with a riot breaking out at Fort Myers High School, and administrators at Fort Myers High School pretended not to recognize a black coach, causing police officers to send attack dogs after him. The court order stayed in place for 35 years, and many of its measures are still in place today.[4]

Post-secondary

Fort Myers Technical College
Cape Coral Technical College[5]

High schools

Middle schools

  • Alva Middle School
  • Bonita Springs Middle School
  • Caloosa Middle School
  • Challenger Middle School
  • Cypress Lake Middle School
  • Diplomat Middle School
  • Fort Myers Middle Academy
  • Gulf Middle School
  • Harns Marsh Middle School
  • Lee Middle School
  • Lehigh Acres Middle School
  • Lexington Middle School
  • Mariner Middle School
  • Oak Hammock Middle School
  • Oasis Middle School
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar Middle School
  • Three Oaks Middle School
  • Trafalgar Middle School
  • Varsity Lakes Middle School

Elementary schools

  • Allen Park Elementary
  • Alva Elementary
  • Bayshore Elementary
  • Bonita Springs Elementary
  • Caloosa Elementary
  • Cape Elementary
  • Colonial Elementary
  • Diplomat Elementary
  • Dr. Carrie D. Robinson Littleton Elementary
  • Edgewood Academy
  • Fort Myers Beach Elementary
  • Franklin Park Magnet
  • G. Weaver Hipps Elementary School
  • Gateway Charter School
  • Gateway Elementary
  • Gulf Elementary
  • Hancock Creek Elementary
  • Harns Marsh Elementary
  • Hector A. Cafferata, Jr. Elementary
  • Heights Elementary
  • J. Colin English Elementary
  • Lehigh Elementary
  • Manatee Elementary
  • Mirror Lakes Elementary
  • Oasis Elementary North
  • Oasis Elementary South
  • Orange River Elementary
  • Orangewood Elementary
  • Patriot Elementary
  • Pelican Elementary
  • Pine Island Elementary
  • Pinewoods Elementary
  • Ray V. Pottorf Elementary
  • Rayma C. Page Elementary
  • River Hall Elementary
  • San Carlos Park Elementary
  • Skyline Elementary
  • Spring Creek Elementary
  • Sunshine Elementary
  • Tanglewood/Riverside Elementary
  • The Sanibel School K-8
  • Three Oaks Elementary
  • Tice Elementary
  • Tortuga Preserve Elementary
  • Trafalgar Elementary
  • Treeline Elementary
  • Tropic Isles Elementary
  • Villas Elementary

Charter/Special Schools

  • Six Mile Charter Academy
  • Veterans Park Academy for the Arts K-8
  • Veterans Park Academy for the Arts
  • North Fort Myers Academy for the Arts K-8
  • The Sanibel School K-8
  • Gateway Charter School
  • James Stephens International Academy
  • Edison Park Creative and Expressive Arts School
  • Gateway Charter High School

See also

List of school districts in Florida

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for LEE". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  2. ^ "Fast Facts / Impact Reports". Fast Facts - Lee County Schools. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  3. ^ "Understanding Open Enrollment - Lee County School District". leeschools.net. Archived from the original on August 27, 2015. Retrieved August 21, 2015.
  4. ^ Smith, Ashley (May 17, 2017). "Lee lagged on integration". Retrieved November 21, 2017.
  5. ^ Logan, Casey (June 8, 2015). "Fort Myers, Cape Coral technical institutes now colleges". News-Press. Retrieved June 9, 2015.