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McKinney Independent School District

School district in Texas, United States

McKinney Independent School District

Summary

School district in Texas, United States

FieldValue
nameMcKinney Independent School District
logoMcKinney Independent School District Logo.jpg
addressOne Duvall Street
cityMcKinney
countyCollin County
stateTexas
countryUnited States
typePublic School
mottoEvery Student, Every Day!
gradesPre-K12th grade
established1848
superintendentShawn Pratt
schools32
us_nces_district_id4829850
students23,306 (2023-2024)
teachers1,583.03 (FTE)
ratio14.72
websitehttps://www.mckinneyisd.net/

McKinney Independent School District (McKinney ISD) is a public independent school district in McKinney, Texas, United States. In addition to McKinney, the district serves the town of New Hope and parts of Allen, Fairview, Weston, Princeton, and Lowry Crossing. The district operates 22 elementary schools, five middle schools, three high schools, two alternative schools, and one early childhood education center.

In 2009, the school district was rated "academically acceptable" by the Texas Education Agency.

History

Circa 2014 residents of the Stonegate neighborhood in Lucas made a petition to be rezoned from McKinney ISD into Lovejoy ISD, but both districts refused the request.

Demographics

EthnicityPercentWhiteAsianHispanicAfrican AmericanAmerican IndianPacific IslanderTwo or More Races
48.3%
4.6%
28.6%
14.5%
0.6%
0.2%
3.1%

Schools

[[McKinney Boyd High School
[[McKinney North High School
[[McKinney High School

High Schools (Grades 9-12)

  • McKinney High School
  • McKinney North High School
  • McKinney Boyd High School

Middle Schools (Grades 6-8)

  • Cockrill Middle School
  • Dowell Middle School
  • Evans Middle School
  • Faubion Middle School
  • Scott Johnson Middle School

Elementary Schools (Grades PK-5)

  • Bennett Elementary
  • Burks Elementary
  • Caldwell Elementary
  • C. T. Eddins Elementary School
    • 2007 National Blue Ribbon School
  • Finch Elementary
  • Frazier Elementary
  • Glen Oaks Elementary
    • 2006 National Blue Ribbon School
  • Reuben Johnson Elementary
  • Malvern Elementary
  • McClure Elementary
  • McGowen Elementary
  • McNeil Elementary
  • Minshew Elementary
  • Press Elementary
  • Slaughter Elementary
  • Valley Creek Elementary
    • National Blue Ribbon School in 1996-97 and 2003
  • Vega Elementary
  • Walker Elementary
  • Webb Elementary
  • Wilmeth Elementary
  • Wolford Elementary
    • 2006 National Blue Ribbon School

Other campuses

  • McKinney Learning Center (DAEP)
  • Serenity High School (Grades 9–12)
  • Herman Lawson Early Childhood Center

Stadium

The district operates the 12,000-seat McKinney ISD Stadium that cost more than $70 million to build. It opened on August 31, 2018. The stadium hosted the 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 NCAA Division II National Championship football games as well as several UIL state football playoff games, such as Duncanville vs. Rockwall in 2019.

References

References

  1. "McKinney ISD Establishment Date". McKinney Independent School District.
  2. "McKinney ISD Superintendent".
  3. "McKinney ISD NCES Data". National Center for Education Statistics.
  4. "Collin County Interactive Maps".
  5. "2009 Accountability Rating System". Texas Education Agency.
  6. Beattie, Chris. (June 25, 2014). "McKinney, Lovejoy ISDs reject neighborhood's annexation request". [[Star Local Media]].
  7. "MCKINNEY ISD | Profile | Explore Texas Schools".
  8. "2007 No Child Left Behind - Blue Ribbon Schools: All Public Elementary Schools". US Department of Education.
  9. "2003 No Child Left Behind - Blue Ribbon Schools". US Department of Education.
  10. "Blue Ribbon Schools Program, Schools Recognized 1982-1983 Through 1999-2002". US Department of Education.
  11. "MISD Discipline Centers".
  12. (July 30, 2018). "We now know why McKinney ISD's $70 million stadium cracked". [[Houston Chronicle]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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