Richmond County School System

The Richmond County School System is an American public school system based in Augusta, Georgia. It is run by the Richmond County Board of Education which is required under Article VIII, § V, Paragraph 2 which requires that each school system be under the management and control of an elected board of education. As elected Constitutional officials of Georgia, the school board members are responsible for setting educational policies, employing school personnel, providing buildings and equipment, operating a transportation system and disbursing school funds. The board of education meets in the Richmond County Board of Education building on 864 Broad Street in Augusta, Georgia. It serves consolidated Augusta-Richmond County, Georgia and the south Richmond County cities of Hephzibah and Blythe. The system has an enrollment of around 32,000 students, attending 36 elementary schools, ten middle schools, eight high schools, four magnet schools, and three other schools. The school board has its own police department which provides law enforcement services to all the district's schools.[5]

Richmond County School System
Richmond County Board of Education central office
Address
864 Broad Street
, Georgia, 30901-1215
United States
Coordinates33.4757°N 81.9667°W / 33.4757; -81.9667[1]
District information
GradesPre-K – 12
SuperintendentKenneth Bradshaw[2]
School board
  • Walter Eubanks, District 3
  • Charlie Hannah, District 2
  • A.K. Hasan, District 6
  • Charlie Walker Jr., District 7
  • Marion Barnes, District 1
  • Shawnda Griffin, Trustee-Elect
  • Patsy Scott, District 5
  • Wayne Frazier, District 4
  • Venus Cain, District 9 (At-Large) Board Vice-President
  • Helen Minchew, District 10 (At-Large)
Chair of the boardJimmy Atkins, District 8
Accreditation(s)Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
Georgia Accrediting Commission
Budget$375-400M (FY2021)[3]
Students and staff
Enrollment32,000[4]
Faculty2,168[4]
Other information
Websitewww.rcboe.org

The Richmond County School System is in the third phase of a construction program that will renovate older schools and add new schools, particularly for its magnet program. This will include a fine arts elementary magnet school, a vocational magnet school, and second magnet traditional elementary school.[6]

On the most recent state-mandated testing of the academic achievement as well as college- and career-readiness of its students (2019 Georgia Milestones Assessment System-GMAS), the Richmond County School System was ranked among the bottom-ten of the 180 public school systems in Georgia.

Schools

Elementary schools

  • A. Brian Merry Elementary School
  • A. Dorothy Hains Elementary School
  • Barton Chapel Elementary School
  • Bayvale Elementary School
  • Belair K-8 School
  • Blythe Elementary School
  • Copeland Elementary School
  • Deer Chase Elementary School
  • Diamond Lakes Elementary School
  • Freedom Park Elementary School
  • Garrett Elementary School
  • Glenn Hills Elementary School
  • Goshen Elementary School
  • Gracewood Elementary School
  • Hephzibah Elementary School
  • Hornsby K-8 School
  • Jamestown Elementary School
  • Jenkins-White Elementary School
  • Lake Forest Hills Elementary School
  • McBean Elementary School
  • Meadowbrook Elementary School
  • Monte Sano Elementary School
  • Roy E. Rollins Elementary School
  • Southside Elementary School
  • Sue Reynolds Elementary School
  • Terrace Manor Elementary School
  • Tobacco Road Elementary School
  • Warren Road Elementary School
  • Wilkinson Gardens Elementary School
  • Willis Foreman Elementary School

Middle schools

  • Glenn Hills Middle School
  • Hephzibah Middle School
  • Hornsby Middle School
  • Langford Middle School
  • Murphey Middle School
  • Pine Hill Middle School
  • Spirit Creek Middle School
  • Tutt Middle School

High schools

Magnet schools

Other schools

  • Project Change Evening School
  • Richmond County Alternative School
  • Sand Hills Psychoeducational School (for emotionally disturbed students, ages 5–21)
  • Intermediate Literacy and Mathematics Center
  • Reaching Maximum Potential through Manufacturing
  • Performance Learning Center

See also

References

  1. "Free US Geocoder". Archived from the original on 2011-05-11. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
  2. Board picks Roberson to lead schools, Augusta Chronicle
  3. Richmond County Board of Education- 2011 Budget Report, Retrieved June 26, 2010.
  4. School Stats, Retrieved June 26, 2010.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-12-03. Retrieved 2007-12-23.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. Georgia schools / Your Community Chronicle 2007 - The Augusta Chronicle Archived September 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
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