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Students' guardians use Skyward's Family Access product to stay up-to-date on students' grades, school schedules, food service accounts, and to communicate with teachers and other district staff. Students use Skyward's Student Access product to check their own grades and schedules, work on online assignments, and communicate with teachers.
An additional 3,092 employees provide support services for the system. Jordan District was the largest in Utah until the Canyons School District in the southeastern portion of the county split in 2009. Boundaries for Jordan District now include the communities of Bluffdale, Copperton, Herriman, Riverton, South Jordan and most of West Jordan.
Goddard USD 265 is a public unified school district headquartered in Goddard, Kansas, United States. [1] The district includes the communities of Goddard, Schulte , and nearby rural areas. [ 4 ]
The Jordan Academy for Technology and Careers (often abbreviated to JATC), is the career and technical school owned and operated by the Jordan School District. It was formerly known as the Jordan Applied Technology Center, receiving the change to the current name in 2015.
Eisenhower High School is a public secondary school in Goddard, Kansas, United States. It is operated by Goddard USD 265 school district and serves students of grades 9 to 12 . The school mascot is the Tiger and the school colors are black and Columbia blue.
Bingham High School is a public high school located in South Jordan, Utah, United States. It is one of eight high schools in the Jordan School District. Teacher/pupil ratios are budgeted at 1 to 27.3, with actual class sizes varying. The school's name and mascot are derived from its proximity to the Bingham Copper Mine.
Canyons District was created after residents voted in 2007 to leave the Jordan School District, which was the largest district in Utah at the time. [5] David Doty, a former high school Spanish teacher and assistant commissioner and director of policy studies for the Utah System of Higher Education, was chosen by the new board of education to be the district's first superintendent.
The school was constructed according to the Jordan School District's policy of basing the design of all high schools on a single, ever-developing model, and as such is architecturally similar to many other high schools in the surrounding area such as Jordan, Copper Hills, Timpanogos, Lone Peak, and Herriman.