Arlington Community Schools

Arlington Community Schools is the municipal school district in Arlington, Tennessee in Greater Memphis.

Arlington Community Schools
Location
Arlington, Tennessee
United States
District information
TypePublic School District
Motto“Empowered and Inspired Today...Leading Our Community Tomorrow”
GradesK-12
Superintendent[https://acsk-12.org/our_district/superintendent/about_the_superintendent/ Jeff Mayo/
Schools

    Arlington Elementary School

      Donelson Elementary School

        Arlington Middle School

          Arlington High School
          Students and staff
          Students~4969

          History

          After Memphis City Schools and Shelby County Schools were merged in March 2011 (effective beginning 2013–2014 school year), several local municipalities attempted to create their own districts. After a protracted legal battle, several municipalities won the right to create their own school districts.[1]

          Arlington Community Schools provides K-12 education for students residing within the municipal boundaries of the Town of Arlington. Through an Interlocal Agreement between Arlington Community Schools and Lakeland School System, high (9-12) school students in the neighboring municipality of Lakeland attend Arlington High School.[2]

          In December 2013 the district selected as its superintendent Tammy Mason, the former principal of Arlington High School.[3]

          Schools

          Elementary Schools

          • Arlington Elementary School
          • Donelson Elementary School

          Middle Schools

          • Arlington Middle School

          High Schools

          References

          1. "Judge: Memphis City Schools will cease to exist in 2013". NBC News. Retrieved March 24, 2014.
          2. Louderback, Terry (February 6, 2014). "Arlington Community School Board Presents Open Enrollment Policy, Interlocal Agreement with Lakeland". The View 38002. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
          3. Smith, L. Taylor. "Lakeland and Arlington pick superintendents for new school districts." The Commercial Appeal. December 23, 2013. Retrieved on March 11, 2014.


          This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.