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The Jones County School District is a public school district based in Ellisville, Mississippi (). [1]Located in Jones County, it includes portions of Hattiesburg, as well as the municipalities of Ellisville, Sandersville, and Soso, and the census-designated places of Moselle, Ovett, Kracker's Neck, and Sharon, as well as the Jones County portion of Eastabuchie.
West Jones High School, the "Home of the Mustangs," is a public school in Laurel, Mississippi, part of the Jones County School District. The school provides education to grades 7–12. The school was named the state's Tech Prep Exemplary Site for 1975–2003 by the Tech Prep Exemplary Site Selection Committee. [2]
Northeast Jones High School (NEJ) is a public high school located in Jones County, Mississippi, United States, near the city of Laurel. Northeast Jones serves students in grades 7 through 12 and is one of three traditional high schools in the Jones County School District .
This is a list of school districts in Mississippi.. School districts which are independent governments as per the U.S. Census Bureau include county-wide school districts, consolidated school districts, municipal separate school districts, special municipal separate school districts, and junior colleges.
Mississippi has the highest percentage of Black residents of any state. LEXINGTON, Miss. (AP) — There are 32 school districts The post 32 Mississippi school districts still under federal ...
Ellisville State School: 1,459 4 Jones County School District: 1,162 5 Sanderson Farms 889 6 Wayne Farms: 715 7 Laurel School District: 600 8 Walmart: 585 9 Masonite: 556 10 Jones County 510 11 Sawmill Square Mall 450 12 Jones County Junior College: 427 13 MS Industries for Individuals with Disabilities 415 14 Southern Hens 390 15 City of ...
Soso is a town in Jones County, Mississippi, United States. The population was 418 at the 2020 census. [2] ... Soso is served by the Jones County School District.
The school district said it could not comment on individual cases. But in an interview this past spring, Hinds County Sheriff Victor Mason called on school officials to make “fewer arrests” and urged them to work more cooperatively with parents when students have discipline issues. “I think we should be the last people called in,” he said.