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The state's goal is for IU's to meet student and community needs in a cost-effective manner by providing services best offered on a regional basis such as special education, technical education, services to public and nonpublic schools. IN 2016-17 the CSIU16 budget is $76.7 million for programs and services and $1,073,846 General operating budget.
The student population is diverse, in 2020 with 55% of students identifying as Hispanic/Latina/o American, 25% identifying as White American, 6% as Asian American, 2% African American, 4.5% as mixed-race and 3.5% unknown. The student population is 64% percent female and 36% percent male in 2017. [43]
The Jeannette City School District is a small urban school district in Southwestern Pennsylvania. It is located in Westmoreland County and is surrounded by the Penn-Trafford and Hempfield Area School Districts. The district consists of two schools, McKee Elementary School (PK-6) and the Jeannette Junior-Senior High School (7-12).
Jeannette is a city in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 8,780 at the 2020 census. Jeannette was founded in 1888 and named after Jeannette Hartupee McKee, the wife of one of the city's founders, H. Sellers McKee. [3] It is part of the Pittsburgh metropolitan area.
Central Westmoreland Career and Technology Center, or CWCTC, is located in New Stanton, Pennsylvania.CWCTC is a part-time Career and Technical Educational School with 10 sending school districts.
Dunmore High School's student body is very active within the school and in the local community. In 2011, the Crimson Courier , Dunmore High School's newspaper, was nationally recognized for its work on an ongoing piece, entitled "Made In America".
Nov. 11—An idea to use the former Jeannette EMS station as the city's new fire department was nixed after a tour revealed the proposal might be more costly than anticipated. "Even to get the ...
The region was originally served by the Southern Idaho College of Education (SICE) in Albion, which closed in 1951.Although proposals for a junior college in southern Idaho were made as early as 1952 and courses were offered at the short-lived Southern Idaho College in Buhl in the early 1960s, it wasn't until the Idaho Legislature passed and Governor Robert Smylie signed the Junior College Act ...