Non-high school district

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Non-high school district is an American form of public school district which does not itself provide a high school, but instead reimburses nearby public districts with high schools for the education of students in the non-high district. At least two states in the United States — Illinois and Washington — still have districts designated as non-high school districts.

Illinois
Non-high districts have existed since 1917 and are still provided for by statute. An Illinois non-high district is a special form of high school district consisting of the portion of a county not in any high school district or unit school district.[1] It is separate from any local grade school district. It pays the tuition of eighth grade graduates to nearby high schools, and may provide for their daily transportation. Only one remains: Chester Non-High School District 122, whose territory is in and around Prairie du Rocher in Randolph County.[2] More recent Illinois laws allow a unit school district to deactivate either its elementary schools or its high schools and pay the tuition for their students of the appropriate level to attend nearby districts' schools. There were 13 such deactivations between 1984 and 2010.[3]
Washington
All school districts in the state of Washington are either "high school districts" or "nonhigh school districts".[4] Nonhigh school districts select "serving" high school districts, for which the nonhigh district also contributes to building funds, but any high school with more than a third of the nonhigh district's students is always a "serving" district. Students may attend a serving or non-serving district.[5]

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References[]

  1. ^ Non-High School Districts (105 ILCS 5/12-10, et seq.). Retrieved 2010-03-25.
  2. ^ Kiehna, Marc L. (October 2006). The Chester Non-High School District: A historical and contemporary case study (Ph.D. thesis). Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. OCLC 144332090. Lay summary. {{cite book}}: Cite uses deprecated parameter |lay-url= (help)
  3. ^ School District Reorganizations (PDF) (Report). Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Board of Education. 2010-09-22. p. 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2011-03-26.
  4. ^ RCW 28A.545.010 School district divisions -- High and nonhigh. Retrieved 2011-03-25.
  5. ^ RCW 28A.540.110: Designation of high school district nonhigh district students shall attend — Effect when attendance otherwise. Retrieved 2011-03-25.
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