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In 2012, Schoology raised $6 million in a round led by Firstmark Capital; in 2014, Schoology raised $15 million in a funding round led by Intel Capital; [2] [3] in November 2015, Schoology raised $32 million in a funding round, led by JMI Equity. [4] In November 2013, Schoology had over 7.5 million users across about 60,000 schools. [5]
[22]: 60 These improvements prompted a second name change in 1923, when the Texas Legislature renamed the school Southwest Texas State Teachers College. [13]: 40 Another change occurred in 1959, with the school becoming Southwest Texas State College. Ten years later, the legislature renamed the school Southwest Texas State University. [15]
Texas State University: 38,759 38,231 37,864 37,812 38,187 38,644 38,694 ... Texas Higher Education Data This page was last edited on 12 November 2024, at 00 ...
On September 1, 1999, the Marshall extension center was officially designated a stand-alone campus by the Texas Legislature, and it became known as Texas State Technical College Marshall. In 2011, the Legislature redefined the TSTC West Texas campus as one that serves West Texas with four strategically positioned, permanent locations at ...
Western Texas College: Snyder 1969 1,434 Wharton County Junior College: Wharton 1946 5,687 Texas State Technical College: Waco (Main) Abilene Breckenridge Brownwood Sweetwater Fort Bend Count Harlingen Marshall North Texas Hutto 1969 17,781
[15] [16] North Texas would leave the system the same year becoming independently governed North Texas State College. [17] North Texas would later become the flagship campus of the University of North Texas System. Similar name changes would result in Southwest Texas State College in 1959 and Sam Houston State College in 1965. [8] West Texas ...
In the 2015–2016 school year, the school district had a total of 11,342 students, ranging from early childhood education and pre-kindergarten through grade 12. The class of 2015 included 752 graduates; the annual drop-out rate across grades 9-12 was less than 1%.
Looking beyond high school, a study by the 1990 National Home Education Research Institute (as cited by Wichers, 2001) found that at least 33% of homeschooled students attended a four-year college, and 17% attended a two-year college [73] (with the national average being 40% and 20%, respectively). [72]