Eureka County School District (ECSD) is a school district headquartered in Eureka, Nevada.[1] It covers Eureka County.[2]
History
editGreg Wieman was the superintendent beginning circa 2014 and ending in 2016. The board of trustees chose not to retain him as superintendent.[3]
Some time prior to 2017, the district began using a four-day per week schedule.[4]
In 2017 its enrollment was below 250. Most students, after completing senior high school, go to the military and/or to post-secondary education. According to superintendent Dan Wold, "everybody knows each other -- most are somehow related" due to the small population.[4]
In November 2022 there were 63 people working for the district, and the district had 330 students.[3]
Operations
editThe funding of the district comes from taxation from businesses that run mining operations.[4]
Schools
edit- Eureka County High School
- As of 1999[update] it also takes high school students on the Duckwater Indian Reservation,[5] and from Duckwater, Nevada. Families living around Eureka County High School students often house Duckwater students who they are related to while those students go to Eureka County High.[6]
- Eureka Elementary School
- Crescent Valley Elementary School
- Eureka On-Line School
References
edit- ^ "Home". Eureka County School District. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
660 Mathew Street, Eureka, NV 89316
- ^ "2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Eureka County, NV" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 11, 2023. - Text list
- ^ a b Longhi, Lorraine (November 1, 2022). "School Board candidate's past as rural superintendent questioned". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
- ^ a b c Morell, Casey (August 18, 2017). "Back To School In Eureka County". KNPR. Retrieved March 11, 2023.
- ^ "School provides a focal point for community". Reno Gazette-Journal. June 13, 1999. p. 1C. - Clipping from Newspapers.com. Text detail A and Text detail B: "Once they're in high school, [...]" - The main idea of the article is the school serving the reservation students, so this talks about people living on the reservation and where they go to high school.
- ^ Papinchak, Steve (September 28, 1986). "It's back to basics at Duckwater's 1-room school". Reno Gazette-Journal. pp. 1D–2D. - Clipping of first (Text detail) and of second page (Text detail A, text detail B) at Newspapers.com. "[...]or they can take the dirt road that leads to Eureka High School,[...]" - The main idea is the public Duckwater, NV grade school, so the article is talking about the Duckwater, NV community.
External links
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