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The Keystone School District is a small, rural public school district in Clarion County, Pennsylvania.It serves the boroughs of Shippenville, Knox, and Callensburg, as well as the townships of Beaver Township, Elk Township, Licking Township, Ashland Township, and Salem Township.
Keystone High School is a high school in Knox, Pennsylvania. There are about 600 students and 40 faculty members at the school. The school is one of seven public high schools in Clarion County. Students, if they wish to pursue a vocational trade, may attend the Clarion County Career Center in Shippenville part-time.
The district has 94 schools (including 51 elementary schools, 16 middle schools, 16 high schools, 11 special schools) with 8,339 employees serving approximately 60,500 students in the cities of Knoxville and Farragut as well as all other communities in the county. There are 3,927 classroom teachers, 85 principals, and 126 assistant principals.
School lunch was extended to all elementary schools in Japan in 1952. With the enactment of the School Lunch Law in 1954, school meals were extended to junior high schools as well. [citation needed] These early lunches initially included items such as bread, bread rolls, and skimmed milk powder (replaced in 1958 by milk bottles and cartons).
Berne-Knox-Westerlo Central School District is a school district headquartered in Berne, New York. [1] It includes an elementary school and a secondary (junior-senior high) school. Most of the district is in Albany County .
Berne-Knox-Westerlo Junior-Senior High School is a public high school located in Berne, Albany County, New York, U.S.A., and is the only high school operated by the Berne-Knox-Westerlo Central School District.
South Knox Middle-High School was formed from the merger of local high schools in Monroe City, Fritchton, Wheatland, and Decker (which had earlier incorporated Decker Chapel High School). The school's district encompasses most of southern Knox County. In 1985, the high school and middle school were organized as two separate schools.
Ten junior high schools; Eight comprehensive high schools; Four alternative schools; Two Gifted Academies (Knox and Weinberg Elementary School) Arizona College Prep (a preparatory junior high and high school) Five Chandler Traditional Academies (four elementary schools and a junior high school) Four hybrid schools (Traditional and Classic on ...