Contents
Tulsa Public Schools
Tulsa Public Schools is an independent school district serving the Tulsa, Oklahoma area in Northeastern Oklahoma. As of 2022, it is the largest school district in Oklahoma, surpassing Oklahoma City Public Schools for the first time since 2013. As of 2022 the district serves approximately 33,211 students. It is governed by an elected school board. As of November 2021, the Tulsa Public Schools district is accredited by the Oklahoma State Department of Education.
Accreditation
In 2022, Governor of Oklahoma Kevin Stitt asked the Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector to investigate the school district. The governor expressed concern over reports of financial irregularities, questions about the length of COVID-related school closures, and questions about compliance with "a new state law limiting public school instruction on race, gender and history." In 2023, State Superintendent Ryan Walters held a press conference in Tulsa to discuss concerns that could affect accreditation of the Tulsa school district. At the press conference, a member of the group Defense of Democracy was spat upon while questioning the school board's approach to handling prayer in official settings. In August 2023, Walters held another press conference to list the four areas of concern: financial mismanagement, spending more money on administration than in the classroom, reading proficiency scores that continue to decline, and failing schools.
Area
Most of the district is in Tulsa County, where it includes the majority of Tulsa as well as sections of Oakhurst, Sand Springs, and Sapulpa. Portions extend into Creek, Osage, and Wagoner counties.
Schools
Tulsa Public Schools is made up of 45 elementary, 10 middle schools, 9 high schools, 6 alternative schools, 5 district-authorized charter schools, and 1 virtual school. (according to their website www.tulsaschools.org)
Elementary
• Anderson • Bell • Burroughs • Carnegie • Celia Clinton • Clinton West • Cooper • Council Oak • Disney • Dolores Huerta • Eisenhower International • Eliot • Emerson • Eugene Field • Felicitas Mendez International • Greenwood Leadership Academy • Grissom • Hamilton • Hawthorne • Hoover • John Hope Franklin • Kendall-Whittier • Kerr • Key • Lanier • Lewis and Clark • Lindbergh • MacArthur • Marshall • Mayo Demonstration • McClure • McKinley • Mitchell • Owen • Patrick Henry • Peary • Robertson • Salk • Sequoyah • Skelly • Springdale • Unity Learning Academy • Wayman Tisdale Fine Arts Academy • Whitman • Zarrow
Middle Schools
High Schools
Alternative Schools
Charter/Partner schools
Virtual School
School board
The Tulsa School Board has seven members, each representing a different geographic area of the district. Each board member is elected to a four-year term, and the terms of each member are staggered so every year at least one member is up for election. The school board establishes policies, manages the budget, hires the superintendent, and is the final appeals board for the district. The school board's authority is limited to official meetings.
School Board Members
This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not
affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the
Wikimedia Foundation.