North Scott Community School District
The North Scott School District is a rural public school district in Scott County, Iowa. Based in Eldridge, it spans 220 square miles (570 km2) in northern Scott County, and serves the cities of Eldridge, Dixon, Donahue, Long Grove, Maysville, McCausland, Princeton, a portion of northern Davenport, and the surrounding rural areas.[2]
North Scott Community School District | |
---|---|
Location | |
United States | |
District information | |
Type | Local school district |
Grades | K-12 |
Established | 1956 |
Superintendent | Joe Stutting |
Schools | 7 |
Budget | $41,375,000 (2017-18)[1] |
NCES District ID | 1920940[1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 3299 (2019-20)[1] |
Teachers | 208.24 FTE[1] |
Staff | 198.35 FTE[1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 15.84 [1] |
Athletic conference | Mississippi Athletic Conference |
District mascot | Lancers |
Colors | Scarlet and Silver |
Other information | |
Website | www |
History
Because of its central location in the new district, Eldridge was selected as the site for a new junior-senior high school building. The southwest corner of LeClaire Road and South First Street, at the time the east edge of town. Construction began in 1957, and was completed in time for the 1958-1959 school year.
North Scott's first superintendent was Charles Hahn; the first high school principal was Melvin Heiler. Heiler would succeed Hahn in 1964 and guided the district through a period of great growth during the late 1960s and 1970s. He retired in 1980, a year after a successful push for the construction of a 900-seat fine arts auditorium at the high school.
Elementary students in kindergarten through sixth grades continued to attending either rural one-room schoolhouses in various parts of the county (or if they lived in town, an older school building). Students assigned to a particular building depending their grade level and where they lived in the district. By 1961, district leaders began the first of several attempts to pass a bond issue to replace these older school buildings with modern elementary schools. After several failed attempts, voters finally approved a measure in July 1965 to build four elementary buildings: one each in Eldridge, Donahue, Long Grove and Princeton. The elementary buildings were completed by 1967, with each of them named after astronauts (in paying homage to the space program). The older school buildings were either converted for private uses or abandoned.
North Scott's enrollment continued to surge in the early 1970s, with several district buildings receiving additions to accommodate this growth. A new junior high building was erected in Eldridge in 1975 (and opened in January 1976), while another elementary school building - in the fast-growing Park View - opened in the late summer of 1976. Several major additions have been completed to the high school through the years, most notably an auxiliary gymnasium in 1971, a fine arts auditorium in 1981, additional administrative offices in 1983, an expanded media center and computer labs in 1987 and a new science and fine arts wing in 1999. Each of the elementary schools and the junior high also received numerous additions in the late 1990s.
Dr. Tim Dose led the district as its superintendent from 2001 until his unexpected death on July 1, 2008. During his seven-year tenure as the district's top administrator, he was credited for leading the district through tough financial times, punctuated with the layoff of several teachers to offset declining revenue. He had most recently been a driving force in advocating the renewal of the district's physical plant and equipment levy and 1-cent local option sales tax, special funding mechanisms which provide school districts with extra revenue for building, technology and infrastructure projects. [3] Dr. Dennis Rucker, who had served school districts in Illinois and Iowa during the past 30 years, was named interim superintendent a month later.[4]
In March 2009, the school board named Jeff Schwiebert as its new superintendent. Schwiebert had served as superintendent of the Mount Vernon Community School District.[5] During his time as superintendent, he oversaw the implementation of a facilities plan that included additions at the high school and several of the elementary schools, most notably a classroom and gymnasium addition at Ed White Elementary in Eldridge. That plan came into being after voters rejected an earlier proposal that included a second elementary school in Eldridge; there had been considerable community debate on the need for the second Eldridge elementary school and its possible impact on outlying schools. Schwiebert announced his retirement in January 2014, and two months later, Joe Stutting, who had been superintendent of the Sturgeon Bay (Wisconsin) School District, was named superintendent.[6] Early in Stutting's tenure, a major expansion of Ed White Elementary School in Eldridge was completed.
Other superintendents during North Scott's history were Robert "Bear" Stevens (1980–1984), Douglas Otto (1984–1987) and Pascal V. "Pat" DeLuca (1987–2001).
List of schools
High School
- North Scott High School, 200 S. First St., Eldridge.
Junior High School
- North Scott Junior High School, 502 S. Fifth St., Eldridge.
Elementary schools
- Alan Shepard Elementary School, 220 W. Grove St., Long Grove
- Edward White Elementary School, 121 S. Fifth St., Eldridge
- John Glenn Elementary School, 308 N. Main St., Donahue
- Neil Armstrong Elementary School, 212 S. Park View Drive, Park View
- Virgil Grissom Elementary School, 500 Lost Grove Road, Princeton
Facts and figures
Enrollment
Year | District-wide | High schools | Junior high schools | Elementary schools | Other programs & adjustments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005–2006 | 3,008.6[7] | 1,055 | 487 | 1,517 | -50.4 |
2004–2005 | 2,972.4 | 1,073 | 489.1 | 1,461 | -50.7 |
2003-2004[8] | 3,129 | 1,065 | 484 | 1,554 | 26 |
2002-2003[9] | 3,108 | 1,043 | 533 | 1,510 | 22 |
2001-2002[10] | 3,040 | 985 | 536 | 1,504 | 15 |
2000-2001[11] | 3,088 | 978 | 517 | 1,593 | 0 |
See also
References
- "North Scott Comm School District". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
- "North Scott" (PDF). Iowa Department of Education. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
- Dooley, Sheena, "North Scott Superintendent Tim Dose dies unexpectedly," Quad-City Times, July 1, 2008. (Accessed July 2, 2008)
- Dooley, Sheena, "North Scott names interim superintendent," Quad-City Times, July 31, 2008. (Accessed August 1, 2008) Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
- Dooley, Sheena, "North Scott picks Jeff Schwiebert as superintendent," Quad-City Times, March 5, 2009. (Accessed March 9, 2009)
- Campbell, Scott, "NS finds its man: School board to hire Camanche native Joe Stutting as next superintendent," North Scott Press, March 12, 2014. Accessed 03-12-2014.
- Iowa Department of Education: Audit Confirmation Certified Enrollments: HTML Excel (XLS) PDF URL accessed on May 19, 2006
- Iowa Department of Education: Certified Annual Reports for FY03-04 (Spreadsheet) Archived 2006-09-26 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed on May 19, 2006
- Iowa Department of Education: Certified Annual Reports for FY02-03 (Spreadsheet) Archived 2004-12-12 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed on May 19, 2006
- Iowa Department of Education: Certified Annual Reports for FY01-02 (Spreadsheet) Archived 2004-12-12 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed on May 19, 2006
- Iowa Department of Education: Certified Annual Reports for FY00-01 (Spreadsheet) Archived 2004-12-12 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed on May 19, 2006
- Eldridge Centennial Committee, "Eldridge, Iowa: 100 years, 1871-1971."
- "N. Scott District formed in 1956 is largest in Iowa," The Observer, DeWitt, Iowa, Centennial ed., July 1964.