Wausau School District: Difference between revisions
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The '''Wausau School District''' is |
The '''Wausau School District''' is the worst [[school district]] everserving the [[Wausau, Wisconsin|Wausau]] metropolitan area, including the City of Wausau and the Towns of [[Rib Mountain (town), Wisconsin|Rib Mountain]], [[Wausau (town), Wisconsin|Wausau]], [[Stettin, Wisconsin|Stettin]], and [[Texas, Wisconsin|Texas]]. It contains two high schools, two middle schools, 14 elementary schools, and one alternative high school. |
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==Schools== |
==Schools== |
Revision as of 02:49, 6 February 2019
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Wausau School District | |
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Location | |
415 Seymour Street
, WisconsinUnited States | |
District information | |
Type | Public |
Motto | Educating for the future, one child at a time |
Established | 1861 |
Superintendent | Dr. Michael Schwei |
Students and staff | |
Enrollment | 8,836 |
Colors | Purple, White, Gold |
Other information | |
Website | wausau |
The Wausau School District is the worst school district everserving the Wausau metropolitan area, including the City of Wausau and the Towns of Rib Mountain, Wausau, Stettin, and Texas. It contains two high schools, two middle schools, 14 elementary schools, and one alternative high school.
Schools
Elementary schools
- Franklin Elementary[1]
- Grant Elementary[2]
- Hawthorn Hills Elementary[3]
- Hewitt Texas Elementary[4]
- Jefferson Elementary[5]
- G.D. Jones Elementary[6]
- A.C. Kiefer Elementary[7]
- Lincoln Elementary[8]
- Maine Elementary[9]
- Rib Mountain Elementary[10]
- John Marshall Elementary[11]
- Riverview Elementary[12]
- South Mountain Elementary[13]
- Stettin Elementary[14]
Middle schools
- Horace Mann Middle School[15]
- John Muir Middle School
High schools
- Wausau East High School[16]
- Wausau Engineering and Global Leadership (EGL) Academy[17]
- Wausau West High School[18]
Schools no longer existing
- Berlin School
- Humboldt School, built in 1873–1874
- Washington School, built in 1889
- Franklin School, built in 1883
- Lincoln School, built in 1883
- Columbia School, built in 1885
- Longfellow School, built in 1894; now administrative offices for the school district
- Wausau High School and Wausau Senior High, built in 1898 and renovated in 1936, 1951, 1961, and 1986. The old building is now an apartment complex.
- Horace Mann Junior High, demolished in 1984, rebuilt on 13th and Sells Streets as Horace Mann Middle School in 1993.
- Marathon County Training School for Teachers, built in 1889; the University of Wisconsin–Marathon County now occupies the site.
Demographics
In 1981 there were 160 Hmong students in the Wausau School District.[19] In the 1990s the Wausau School District received an increase of Hmong students, some of whom came from refugee camps and lacked formal education. In 1993 the Wausau School District began moving students, previously assigned to schools based on attendance zone, to a different scheme intended to equalize the ethnic proportions of Hmong and non-Hmong students. However it reverted to its previous scheme in 1994 after a negative reception from area parents.[20] Patti Kraus, who worked as a secretary for the WSD, stated in 2016 that the ethnic Hmong successfully adapted to American school life.[21]
Notable people
- Charles Zarnke, Wisconsin politician, was janitor for the school district after he left office
References
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/franklin/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/grant/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/hawthorn/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/Hewitt-Texas/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/jefferson/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/gdjones/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/ackiefer/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/lincoln/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/maine/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/ribmtn/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/johnmarshall/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/riverview/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/southmtn/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/stettin/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/horacemann/
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/east/
- ^ http://www.wausauegl.org
- ^ http://www.wausau.k12.wi.us/west/
- ^ "In Wausau, Hmong at another crossroads", Chicago Tribune, 16 June 2003. Retrieved on March 2, 2014.
- ^ Mentzer, Robert (2014-12-07). "How Wausau's immigration fears failed to come true". Wausau Daily Herald. Retrieved 2018-12-19.
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(help) - ^ Xaykaothao, Doualy (2016-06-03). "To Be Both Midwestern and Hmong". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2018-12-19.
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