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Pinellas County Schools

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Pinellas County Schools is the public school district serving Pinellas County, Florida. The district is based in Largo. With over 104,000 students served in more than 140 schools and centers, the district is the 7th-largest in Florida and 26th-largest in the nation.[1]

History

The district was created upon Pinellas County's split from Hillsborough County in 1912. Dixie M. Hollins was the county's first superintendent of schools. Michael Grego, the current superintendent, has over 30 years of educational experience, having previously served as a teacher, Assistant Superintendent for Hillsborough County Schools, and Superintendent of Osceola County Schools. Like other school districts in Florida and the South, Pinellas County has had to deal with issues of desegregation, court-ordered busing, and school choice. In 2000, the district received "unitary" (desegregated) status from the court assigned to monitor integration issues, and from 2003 to 2007 operated a "controlled choice" program which set minimum and maximum percentages of black pupils in individual schools.

In 2007 the "Choice" program was replaced with a "close-to-home' school program, where students go to the school that is nearest to their residence. The Tampa Bay Times was the biggest proponent of resegregation. In multiple editorials in 2007, the Tampa Bay Times, formerly the St. Petersburg Times, urged the school district to abandon integration efforts in favor of “close to home” schools.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

In addition to neighborhood schools, the district offers 70 application programs, including magnet, fundamental and career academy programs.[7] From 2007 and by 2015 student performance and behavior at five elementary schools in a mostly black area of St. Petersburg sharply declined. Hired in 2012, Michael Grego has launched reforms to aid students in the five schools. They include adding extended learning programs, extra summer instruction and bringing in counselors and social workers to connect families with outside services. In 2014, he began pumping more money into the schools, adding classroom aides, mental health counselors and liaisons to connect families with social services[8]

In March 2009, Pinellas County Schools announced that all schools would close one hour early every Wednesday starting with the 2009–10 school year. The district said that this schedule change was to provide teachers with more planning period time. After much controversy, the school district voted in September 2012 to discontinue early release Wednesdays beginning with the 2013–14 school year.

Superintendents

  • Dixie M. Hollins (1912–1920)
  • Robert S. Blanton (1920–1928)
  • George M. Lynch (1928–1935)
  • George M. Hoffman (1935–1936)
  • Green V. Fuguitt (1936–1948)
  • Floyd T. Christian (1948–1965)
  • Paul D. Bauder (1965–1966)
  • James F. Gollattscheck (1966–1967)
  • Thomas B. Southard (1967–1971)
  • Nicholas G. Mangin (1971–1972)
  • Gus Sakkis (1972–1981)
  • Dr. Scott N. Rose (1981–1991)
  • Dr. J. Howard Hinesley (1991–2004)
  • Dr. Clayton M. Wilcox (2004–2008)[9]
  • Dr. Julie M. Janssen (2008–2011)[10]
  • Dr. John A. Stewart (2011–2012)
  • Dr. Michael A. Grego (2012–present)

School Board

The members of the school board are as follows:

  • Carol J. Cook, Chairperson – Single Member District #5 (2000–present)
  • Peggy L. O’Shea, Vice Chairperson – At-Large District #3 (2006–present)
  • Janet R. Clark – At-Large District #1 (2004–present)
  • Terry Krassner – At-Large District #2 (2010–present)
  • Ken Peluso – Single Member District #4 (2014–present)
  • Linda S. Lerner – Single Member District #6 (1990–present)
  • Rene Flowers – Single Member District #7 (2012–present)

Districts 1–3 are at-large districts, elected by the voters of the entire school district. Districts 4–7 are single-member districts, voted on only by the voters who reside in the member district. The members from single-member districts are also required to reside within the district from which he or she is elected.[11]

Schools in Pinellas County

The district covers a total of 142 institutions: 76 elementary schools, 22 middle schools, 17 high schools, 6 alternative & exception education schools, 9 adult/vocational schools, 16 centers, and 14 charter schools. With more than 17,000 teachers, administrators and support staff, the district is also Pinellas County's largest employer. Additionally, over 20,000 people serve as volunteers.[12]

High schools

Middle schools

  • Azalea Middle School
  • Bay Point Middle School
  • Carwise Middle School
  • Clearwater Fundamental Middle School
  • Clearwater Intermediate School
  • Dunedin Highland Middle School
  • East Lake Middle School Academy of Engineering
  • James B. Sanderlin IB World School (K–8)
  • John Hopkins Middle School
  • Largo Middle School
  • Lealman Innovation Academy
  • Madeira Beach Fundamental School (K–8)
  • Meadowlawn Middle School
  • Morgan Fitzgerald Middle School
  • Oak Grove Middle School
  • Osceola Middle School
  • Palm Harbor Middle School
  • Pinellas Park Middle School
  • Safety Harbor Middle School
  • Seminole Middle School
  • Tarpon Springs Middle School
  • Thurgood Marshall Fundamental Middle School
  • Tyrone Middle School

Elementary schools

  • Anona Elementary
  • Azalea Elementary
  • Bardmoor Elementary
  • Bauder Elementary
  • Bay Point Elementary
  • Bay Vista Fundamental Elementary
  • Bear Creek Elementary
  • Belcher Elementary
  • Belleair Elementary
  • Blanton Elementary
  • Brooker Creek Elementary
  • Campbell Park Elementary
  • Cross Bayou Elementary
  • Curlew Creek Elementary
  • Curtis Fundamental Elementary
  • Cypress Woods Elementary
  • Douglas L. Jamerson Elementary
  • Dunedin Elementary
  • Eisenhower Elementary
  • Fairmount Park Elementary
  • Forest Lakes Elementary
  • Frontier Elementary
  • Fuguitt Elementary
  • Garrison-Jones Elementary
  • Gulfport Elementary Montessori Academy
  • High Point Elementary
  • Highland Lakes Elementary
  • James B. Sanderlin IB World School (K–8)
  • John M. Sexton Elementary
  • Lake St George Elementary
  • Lakeview Fundamental Elementary
  • Lakewood Elementary
  • Lealman Avenue Elementary
  • Leila G. Davis Elementary
  • Lynch Elementary School
  • Madeira Beach Fundamental School (K–8)
  • Marjorie K. Rawlings Elementary
  • Maximo Elementary
  • McMullen-Booth Elementary
  • Melrose Elementary
  • Mildred Helms Elementary
  • Mount Vernon Elementary
  • New Heights Elementary
  • North Shore Elementary
  • Northwest Elementary
  • Oakhurst Elementary
  • Oldsmar Elementary
  • Orange Grove Elementary
  • Ozona Elementary
  • Palm Harbor Elementary
  • Pasadena Fundamental Elementary
  • Perkins Elementary
  • Pinellas Central Elementary
  • Pinellas Park Elementary
  • Plumb Elementary
  • Ponce De Leon Elementary
  • Ridgecrest Elementary
  • Rio Vista Elementary
  • Safety Harbor Elementary
  • San Jose Elementary
  • Sandy Lane Elementary
  • Sawgrass Lake Elementary
  • Seminole Elementary
  • Seventy-Fourth St Elementary
  • Shore Acres Elementary
  • Skycrest Elementary
  • Skyview Elementary
  • Southern Oak Elementary
  • Starkey Elementary
  • Sunset Hills Elementary
  • Sutherland Elementary
  • Tarpon Springs Elementary
  • Tarpon Springs Fundamental Elementary
  • Walsingham Elementary
  • Westgate Elementary
  • Woodlawn Elementary

Alternative and exceptional education schools

  • Calvin Hunsinger School
  • Hamilton Disston School
  • Nina Harris School
  • Ridgecrest Elementary Center for Gifted Studies (ESE Full-Time Gifted Academic Programming)
  • Paul B. Stephens School
  • Pinellas Secondary School (Alternative School) (6–12)
  • Richard L. Sanders School

Career technical and adult education

  • Clearwater Adult Ed. Center
  • Dixie Hollins Adult Ed. Center
  • Lakewood Community
  • Northeast Community
  • Palm Harbor Community
  • Pinellas Technical Education Center (PTEC) – Clearwater
  • Pinellas Technical Education Center (PTEC) – St. Petersburg
  • Seminole Vocational Ed. Center
  • Tomlinson Adult Learning Center

Charter schools

  • Academie Da Vinci (K–5)
  • Alfred Adler Elementary (K–3)
  • Athenian Academy (K–8)
  • Imagine Charter (PreK–8)
  • New Start (Life Skills North) (9–12)
  • Mavericks High North Pinellas (9–12)
  • Mavericks High South Pinellas (9–12)
  • Pinellas Preparatory Academy (Grades 4–8)
  • Pinellas Primary Academy (K–3)
  • Plato Academy (PreK–8)
  • Plato North Academy (K–8)
  • Plato Seminole Academy (K–8)
  • Plato South Academy (K–8)
  • St. Petersburg Collegiate High School (Grades 10–12)[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Home." (Archive) Pinellas County Schools. Retrieved on August 28, 2011. "301 Fourth St. SW Largo, FL 33770"
  2. ^ "School integration is not the answer". Tampa Bay Times. October 11, 2007.
  3. ^ "Home school plan deserves support". Tampa Bay Times. July 1, 2007.
  4. ^ "More on classes; less on buses". Tampa Bay Times. September 15, 2007.
  5. ^ "Leave school choice mistakes behind". Tampa Bay Times. October 7, 2007.
  6. ^ "Don't stop now on school plan". Tampa Bay Times. October 23, 2007.
  7. ^ http://www.pcsb.org/cms/lib8/FL01903687/Centricity/Domain/105/PCSB%20Application%20Programs%20Guide%20for%20Families.pdf
  8. ^ Fitzpatrick, Cara, Lisa Gartner, and Michael LaForgia."Failure Factories" (Archive). Tampa Bay Times. August 14, 2015. Retrieved on August 16, 2015.
  9. ^ Tampa Bay Newspapers, Apr. 17, 2008. School superintendent tenders resignation
  10. ^ Pettiford, Trevor (2 September 2011). "Janssen leaves post with memories, few regrets". Bay News 9. Retrieved 7 September 2011.
  11. ^ https://www.pcsb.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=389&Itemid=1558
  12. ^ https://www.pcsb.org/
  13. ^ https://www.pcsb.org/images/stories/Communications/publications/Media_Guide/school_list_2011_12.pdf