Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Mesa Public Schools

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Type
  
Public

Superintendent
  
Michael Cowan

Area
  
489.5 km²

Budget
  
563.4 million USD (12-13)

Established
  
1946

Number of students
  
64,740

Founded
  
1946

Mesa Public Schools wwwroushcleantechcomwpcontentuploadssitesde

Motto
  
"Unprecedented Excellence in Education"

Mesa public schools


Mesa Public Schools (incorporated as Mesa Unified School District #4) is the largest public school district in the state of Arizona. Its approximately 64,000 students enjoy opportunities such as Montessori, International Baccalaureate, dual-language immersion, honors and Advanced Placement courses and Franklin traditional schools.

Contents

Map of Mesa Unified School District, AZ, USA

MPS serves most of the city of Mesa, plus small portions of Tempe and Chandler.

The district includes 55 elementary schools, 9 junior high schools, six comprehensive high schools, and several alternative schools.

The educator Jack Taylor served on the school board for eight years. He was also the mayor of Mesa from 1966 to 1972; thereafter a member, consecutively, of both houses of the Arizona State Legislature; a native of Sonora, Texas, he is interred at Mesa City Cemetery

High schools

High schools (9-12) as listed by Mesa Public Schools:

Junior high schools

Junior high schools (7-8) as listed by Mesa Public Schools:

Mesa Public Schools operated two other junior high schools until 2009-2010 school year.

Hendrix Junior High School consolidated with the adjoining Frost Elementary School as the K-8 Summit Academy with an International Baccalaureate Program. Hendrix had the husky as its mascot and used the colors red and gray.

Powell Junior High School (colors red, white, and blue, mascot the Patriots) closed in May 2010. The former campus serves as the Mesa Educational Center, home to the district's Community Education Department, East Valley Academy and Crossroads.

Mesa Jr closed at the end of the 2011-2012 school year and was demolished in January 2014 - Plans for new park in 2014 are upcoming Brimhall closed at the end of the 2011-2012 school year - convert to Franklin school

Name notes
  • Fremont — John C. Fremont
  • Kino — Eusebio Kino
  • Poston-Charles D. Poston
  • Shepherd — Rulon T. Shepherd, a 30-year Mesa superintendent who built the first junior high in Mesa
  • Stapley — Orley S. Stapley, at one time the largest International Harvester farm equipment dealer in the United States, as well as the owner of the largest mercantile business in Arizona during the 1940s and 1950s; also the namesake of Stapley Drive
  • Taylor — Harvey L. Taylor
  • Elementary schools

    Elementary schools (K-6) as listed by Mesa Public Schools:

    Frost Elementary consolidated with the adjoining Hendrix Junior High in 2010-11 to become the K-8 Summit Academy.

    Alternative school

    Alternative schools (named "Focus Schools" by the district) as listed by Mesa Public Schools:

    References

    Mesa Public Schools Wikipedia