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Hillsborough County Public Schools

Hillsborough County Public Schools (HCPS) is a school district that runs the public school system of Hillsborough County in west central Florida and is headquartered in Tampa, Florida, United States. It is frequently referred to as the School District of Hillsborough County (SDHC).

Hillsborough County Public Schools
Location
United States
District information
TypePublic
MottoPreparing Students For Life
GradesPre K-12
SuperintendentVan Ayres
Schools250[1]
Budget$3.3 billion [2]
Students and staff
Students206,841
Teachers15,162
Staff25,170 (includes teachers)
Other information
Employee unionHillsborough Classroom Teachers Association (HCTA)[3]
WebsiteOfficial website

The district serves all of Hillsborough County.[4] It is the third largest school district in Florida and the 7th largest in the United States.[5] It is governed by the School Board of Hillsborough County, which consists of seven elected members and one superintendent, who is hired by the board. The current superintendent is Van Ayres.[6]

History edit

The school board discriminated against black teachers, and after the Florida State Teachers Association helped organize a lawsuit challenging the unequal pay schedule, the board responded by dropping racial categories for a rating system that scored black teachers lower than their white counterparts.[7]

In 2021 it had over 213,000 students, giving it the seventh highest student population of any U.S. school district.[8]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in Florida, one week after the start of school in 2021, the district had 1,805 cases of students and/or employees contracting COVID-19, and as a result had to isolate or quarantine about 10,384 students and 338 employees.[8]

List of schools edit

Demographics edit

In the 2021–2022 academic year, the ethnic makeup of Hillsborough County Public Schools was as follows:[9]

  • 4.52% Asian
  • 21.06% Black
  • 36.87% Hispanic
  • 0.18% Indian
  • 6.27% Multi-ethnic
  • 31.10% White

School board edit

The Hillsborough County School Board[10] consists of seven elected officials, five elected by voters in their district and two elected on a countywide basis. As of November 17, 2020 the board consists of:

  • Lynn Gray – District 7
  • Stacy Hahn – District 2
  • Nadia Combs – District 1 (
  • Jessica Vaughn – District 3 (Vice Chair)
  • Patti Rendon – District 4
  • Henry "Shake" Washington – District 5
  • Karen Perez – District 6 (Chair)

The board has the authority to hire and fire the superintendent, who oversees the day-to-day operation of the school system and reports to the board. Since November 2023, the superintendent has been Van Ayres,[6][11] who was previously Chief of Strategic Planning and Partnerships, and Deputy of Schools for Hillsborough County.[12] He replaced Addison Davis,[13] who resigned in June 2023.

School libraries edit

Each school in the county has a Library/Media Center and a full-time, certified Media Specialist. The Media Specialist is responsible for creating and curating the school's collection of online and physical books, periodicals, audio/visual materials, and maker space materials. Each school's collection is their own and should reflect the community around the school and the needs of the students and teachers at that site. Every library has a public-facing catalogue that allows the public to review all books in the library pursuant to Fl Senate Bill CS/HB 1467.[14]

The school libraries have three main programs each year: Poetry Jam at the Middle and High School Level, SLAM, Student Literacy & Media, Showcase for all levels, and the Storytelling Festival for Elementary levels.

Poetry Jam is a coordination between the Hillsborough County Public Schools Library Media Services and the Arts in Education Department. Local Poets come to school libraries to host writing workshops with students who then participate in a school level Jam competition. At the high school level, the top three students get to advance to a district competition.[15][dead link]

SLAM Showcase is a celebration of reading based around the SSYRA Jr, Sunshine State Young Readers Award Junior, SSYRA, Sunshine State Young Readers Award, and Florida Teen Reads selected works each year. Students interested in participating read one of the works for their age level and then create art based on the book, either 2D, 3D, or digital art. Each school then selects students from each category to attend a festival at the Tampa Convention Center where all the art is displayed and several authors of the works participate in a panel discussion with time for student questions and then book signings.[16][dead link]

The Storytelling Festival is put on by the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library and Hillsborough County Public School Libraries participates each year by bringing storytellers into elementary schools to host workshops for students. Students may then choose to sign up to participate in the storytelling festival and tell their own memorized piece.

Athletics edit

Hillsborough County Schools provides athletic opportunities for high school boys in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, wrestling, and lacrosse. For high school girls, the sports are basketball, cheer, cross country, flag football, golf, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track and field, lacrosse, and volleyball.

Strawberry Schools edit

Prior to 1956, many of the schools in the county in the eastern section near Plant City maintained an unusual schedule based on the strawberry growing season. These schools were closed from January through March and were referred to as Strawberry Schools.[17] Among these schools were the Glover School,[18] Cork,[19] Keysville, Pinecrest, and Turkey Creek. Some schools in this area of the county retain one vestige of the old schedule; rather than having a spring holiday for the Florida State Fair, they celebrate a holiday for the Florida Strawberry Festival.[20]

Integration edit

Like most public school systems in the southern United States, Hillsborough County once maintained a strictly racially segregated school system. Several schools had a population of 100 percent minority students, including Don Thompson Vocational High School in Tampa, (now known as Blake High School) and the Glover School in Bealsville, Florida near Plant City, while most public schools were for white students only. Following the U.S. Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1954, a federal district court found in 1962 that Hillsborough County was operating an "illegally segregated public school system".[21] The district spent much of the next 9 years employing various strategies designed to delay integration of the schools.[22] Hillsborough County began integrating select schools during the 1965–1966 school year,[23] but in 1971, a federal judge ruled that the pace was too slow and ordered the school district to initiate a comprehensive desegregation program.[21] The school system responded with a busing program designed to result in the same percentage of students by race in each school. The program put almost all of the burden of busing on the black community. Historically black schools, such as Blake and Middleton, were "demoted" to junior high school status and students and teachers, including many who had been there for decades, were reassigned to white suburban schools. Black students faced busing for 10 out of 12 years, while for whites they were only bused 2 of 12 years. While a relatively small number of white flight schools were founded in this time period, three of the five schools hosted grades six and seven only (the grades in which white students were bused.) Immediately following integration the incidents of school discipline grew rapidly, with half of the students disciplined being black, despite making up only one fifth the student population. After continued complaints by activists, the disciplinary situation began to be more equitable after 1974.[24]

In 1991, the district received court approval for a cluster plan to lessen disruption to students. As part of this plan, the district created magnet schools to attract white students to historically black schools, and single-grade schools were replaced with groupings of ages, such as middle schools. In 1994, the NAACP sued the district, alleging that the schools were being resegregated, with some schools being as much as 90% black.[21] A 1998 court ruling agreed that Hillsborough County's school's were not yet "desegregated to the maximum extent practicable" and continued federal monitoring of the process.[25] For the 2001–2002 school year, the district replaced its busing program with a new school choice in an attempt to reduce re-segregation. In 2001, a federal court of appeals declared that the district's schools were "unitary", meaning that they were sufficiently integrated and federal monitoring was no longer required.[21]

Security edit

The school district utilizes Hillsborough County Public Schools Security Services and the Hillsborough County Sheriffs Office at many schools around the county. Known as School Resource Officers, they provide armed security along with other services where they are assigned.[26] Other jurisdictions assist with service calls in a backup capacity. These agencies include Plant City Police Department, Temple Terrace Police Department, and Tampa Police Department. During some local school sponsored sporting events the district will utilize the Florida Highway Patrol, USF Police Department, and Tampa Airport Police Department in conjunction with the other agencies to provide security. Since the school sponsored events are generally served by off-duty law enforcement officers, other local agencies may also be present.[citation needed]

Gates Foundation grant edit

In 2009, the Hillsborough County School District was awarded a $100-million-dollar grant by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to improve education through improved mentoring and evaluation of teachers.[27] For six years, the grant funded the "Empowering Effective Teachers" plan.[28]

Empowering Effective Teachers edit

Empowering Effective Teachers was an initiative to promote improvements in education in the school district by increasing effective teaching through new teacher assessments, salary scales, teacher training programs and recruitment.[29] The early phases of the initiative rolled out in 2010, when the district's teacher evaluation form was radically redeveloped into a complex rubric with four areas of focus and multiple subpoints within each area.[30]

The new evaluation standard caused an uproar in the district, mainly due to how classroom evaluations have been implemented since the plan's roll out.[31] Across the state of Florida, 40 percent of a teacher's final evaluation score now is determined by calculating students' learning growth from one year to the next, and a similar policy has been implemented across other states.[citation needed]

In response to the increased demands placed on teachers by the new evaluation system, teachers who opted into the new system would receive a pay increase. The initial increase for most was at least a few thousand dollars, with those earning evaluation scores of 4 or 5 receiving an additional $2,000 or $3,000 each year, respectively. The new pay scale was released at the end of 2013, and all teachers hired before 2011 had a few months to evaluate the new pay scale for deciding if they would opt in.[32] Teachers who did not opt in were not exempt from the new evaluation system; however, their pay would not be affected by their final evaluation score.

References edit

  1. ^ "Hillsborough County Public Schools". U.S. Department of Education.
  2. ^ "HCPS - 19-20 Tentative Budget Website" (PDF).
  3. ^ "Home". HCTA.
  4. ^ "2020 Census - School District Reference Map: Hillsborough County, FL" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 1, 2022. - Text list
  5. ^ "Characteristics of the 100 Largest Public Elementary and Secondary School Districts in the United States: 2003–04". nces.ed.gov. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  6. ^ a b "Hillsborough names Van Ayres permanent school superintendent". WUSF. November 3, 2023. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  7. ^ Shircliffe, Barbara J. (2012). "Rethinking Turner v. Keefe: The Parallel Mobilization of African-American and White Teachers in Tampa, Florida, 1936–1946". History of Education Quarterly. 52: 99–136. doi:10.1111/j.1748-5959.2011.00374.x. S2CID 142501177.
  8. ^ a b Lengthang, Marlene (August 19, 2021). "Over 10,000 students in Florida school district isolated or quarantined a week into school year". ABC News. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  9. ^ https://www.hillsboroughschools.org/cms/lib/FL50000635/Centricity/Domain/4/DemographicReport.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ Hillsborough County School Board
  11. ^ "Van Ayres takes over full-time as Hillsborough County superintendent". baynews9.com. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  12. ^ "Superintendent's Office / Superintendent". www.hillsboroughschools.org. Retrieved April 11, 2024.
  13. ^ "Meet Hillsborough's new school superintendent, Addison Davis". Tampa Bay Times.
  14. ^ Florida Senate Bill CS/HB1467. [1]
  15. ^ "Library Media Services / Poetry Jam". Hillsborough County Public Schools. Retrieved November 27, 2022.
  16. ^ "Library Media Services / SLAM Showcase". Hillsborough County Public Schools. Retrieved November 27, 2022.
  17. ^ "Community Atlas" (PDF).
  18. ^ "The History of Glover School Campus". Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  19. ^ Nicholson, Dave (March 31, 2013). "Cork 'Strawberry school' alumni to reunite". Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  20. ^ Cribb, Robert (April 6, 2008). "The Strawberry Schools". Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  21. ^ a b c d Martin, John (March 20, 2001). "Chronology". Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  22. ^ Days III, Drew S (January 1, 1992). "The Other Desegregation Story: Eradicating the Dual School System in Hillsborough County, Florida". Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  23. ^ Dolan, Mary (January 16, 1989). "Two who ended segregation join King tribute". St. Petersburg Times.
  24. ^ Kimmel, Elinor. "Hillsborough County School Desegregation Busing and Black High Schools in Tampa, Florida April 1971- September 1971". University of South Florida. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  25. ^ "Tampa Schools Fail to End Desegregation Order". The New York Times. AP. October 29, 1998. Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  26. ^ "Hillsborough County Public Schools / Homepage".
  27. ^ "Hillsborough school board accepts $100M Gates grant | Breaking Tampa Bay, Florida and national news and weather from Tampa Bay Online and The Tampa Tribune | TBO.com".
  28. ^ "Hillsborough schools to dismantle Gates-funded system that cost millions to develop". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on March 16, 2014. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  30. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  31. ^ "2013-2014 Bargaining & Ratification Q & A". Retrieved February 9, 2014.
  32. ^ (PDF). Hillsborough CTA. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2014.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • List of all Hillsborough County schools by area

hillsborough, county, public, schools, hcps, school, district, that, runs, public, school, system, hillsborough, county, west, central, florida, headquartered, tampa, florida, united, states, frequently, referred, school, district, hillsborough, county, sdhc, . Hillsborough County Public Schools HCPS is a school district that runs the public school system of Hillsborough County in west central Florida and is headquartered in Tampa Florida United States It is frequently referred to as the School District of Hillsborough County SDHC Hillsborough County Public SchoolsLocationHillsborough CountyFlorida United StatesDistrict informationTypePublicMottoPreparing Students For LifeGradesPre K 12SuperintendentVan AyresSchools250 1 Budget 3 3 billion 2 Students and staffStudents206 841Teachers15 162Staff25 170 includes teachers Other informationEmployee unionHillsborough Classroom Teachers Association HCTA 3 WebsiteOfficial website The district serves all of Hillsborough County 4 It is the third largest school district in Florida and the 7th largest in the United States 5 It is governed by the School Board of Hillsborough County which consists of seven elected members and one superintendent who is hired by the board The current superintendent is Van Ayres 6 Contents 1 History 2 List of schools 3 Demographics 4 School board 5 School libraries 6 Athletics 7 Strawberry Schools 8 Integration 9 Security 10 Gates Foundation grant 10 1 Empowering Effective Teachers 11 References 12 External linksHistory editThe school board discriminated against black teachers and after the Florida State Teachers Association helped organize a lawsuit challenging the unequal pay schedule the board responded by dropping racial categories for a rating system that scored black teachers lower than their white counterparts 7 In 2021 it had over 213 000 students giving it the seventh highest student population of any U S school district 8 During the COVID 19 pandemic in Florida one week after the start of school in 2021 the district had 1 805 cases of students and or employees contracting COVID 19 and as a result had to isolate or quarantine about 10 384 students and 338 employees 8 List of schools editMain article List of schools in Hillsborough County FloridaDemographics editIn the 2021 2022 academic year the ethnic makeup of Hillsborough County Public Schools was as follows 9 4 52 Asian 21 06 Black 36 87 Hispanic 0 18 Indian 6 27 Multi ethnic 31 10 WhiteSchool board editThe Hillsborough County School Board 10 consists of seven elected officials five elected by voters in their district and two elected on a countywide basis As of November 17 2020 the board consists of Lynn Gray District 7 Stacy Hahn District 2 Nadia Combs District 1 Jessica Vaughn District 3 Vice Chair Patti Rendon District 4 Henry Shake Washington District 5 Karen Perez District 6 Chair The board has the authority to hire and fire the superintendent who oversees the day to day operation of the school system and reports to the board Since November 2023 the superintendent has been Van Ayres 6 11 who was previously Chief of Strategic Planning and Partnerships and Deputy of Schools for Hillsborough County 12 He replaced Addison Davis 13 who resigned in June 2023 School libraries editEach school in the county has a Library Media Center and a full time certified Media Specialist The Media Specialist is responsible for creating and curating the school s collection of online and physical books periodicals audio visual materials and maker space materials Each school s collection is their own and should reflect the community around the school and the needs of the students and teachers at that site Every library has a public facing catalogue that allows the public to review all books in the library pursuant to Fl Senate Bill CS HB 1467 14 The school libraries have three main programs each year Poetry Jam at the Middle and High School Level SLAM Student Literacy amp Media Showcase for all levels and the Storytelling Festival for Elementary levels Poetry Jam is a coordination between the Hillsborough County Public Schools Library Media Services and the Arts in Education Department Local Poets come to school libraries to host writing workshops with students who then participate in a school level Jam competition At the high school level the top three students get to advance to a district competition 15 dead link SLAM Showcase is a celebration of reading based around the SSYRA Jr Sunshine State Young Readers Award Junior SSYRA Sunshine State Young Readers Award and Florida Teen Reads selected works each year Students interested in participating read one of the works for their age level and then create art based on the book either 2D 3D or digital art Each school then selects students from each category to attend a festival at the Tampa Convention Center where all the art is displayed and several authors of the works participate in a panel discussion with time for student questions and then book signings 16 dead link The Storytelling Festival is put on by the Tampa Hillsborough County Public Library and Hillsborough County Public School Libraries participates each year by bringing storytellers into elementary schools to host workshops for students Students may then choose to sign up to participate in the storytelling festival and tell their own memorized piece Athletics editHillsborough County Schools provides athletic opportunities for high school boys in baseball basketball cross country football golf soccer swimming tennis track and field wrestling and lacrosse For high school girls the sports are basketball cheer cross country flag football golf soccer softball swimming tennis track and field lacrosse and volleyball Strawberry Schools editPrior to 1956 many of the schools in the county in the eastern section near Plant City maintained an unusual schedule based on the strawberry growing season These schools were closed from January through March and were referred to as Strawberry Schools 17 Among these schools were the Glover School 18 Cork 19 Keysville Pinecrest and Turkey Creek Some schools in this area of the county retain one vestige of the old schedule rather than having a spring holiday for the Florida State Fair they celebrate a holiday for the Florida Strawberry Festival 20 Integration editLike most public school systems in the southern United States Hillsborough County once maintained a strictly racially segregated school system Several schools had a population of 100 percent minority students including Don Thompson Vocational High School in Tampa now known as Blake High School and the Glover School in Bealsville Florida near Plant City while most public schools were for white students only Following the U S Supreme Court s Brown v Board of Education decision of 1954 a federal district court found in 1962 that Hillsborough County was operating an illegally segregated public school system 21 The district spent much of the next 9 years employing various strategies designed to delay integration of the schools 22 Hillsborough County began integrating select schools during the 1965 1966 school year 23 but in 1971 a federal judge ruled that the pace was too slow and ordered the school district to initiate a comprehensive desegregation program 21 The school system responded with a busing program designed to result in the same percentage of students by race in each school The program put almost all of the burden of busing on the black community Historically black schools such as Blake and Middleton were demoted to junior high school status and students and teachers including many who had been there for decades were reassigned to white suburban schools Black students faced busing for 10 out of 12 years while for whites they were only bused 2 of 12 years While a relatively small number of white flight schools were founded in this time period three of the five schools hosted grades six and seven only the grades in which white students were bused Immediately following integration the incidents of school discipline grew rapidly with half of the students disciplined being black despite making up only one fifth the student population After continued complaints by activists the disciplinary situation began to be more equitable after 1974 24 In 1991 the district received court approval for a cluster plan to lessen disruption to students As part of this plan the district created magnet schools to attract white students to historically black schools and single grade schools were replaced with groupings of ages such as middle schools In 1994 the NAACP sued the district alleging that the schools were being resegregated with some schools being as much as 90 black 21 A 1998 court ruling agreed that Hillsborough County s school s were not yet desegregated to the maximum extent practicable and continued federal monitoring of the process 25 For the 2001 2002 school year the district replaced its busing program with a new school choice in an attempt to reduce re segregation In 2001 a federal court of appeals declared that the district s schools were unitary meaning that they were sufficiently integrated and federal monitoring was no longer required 21 Security editThe school district utilizes Hillsborough County Public Schools Security Services and the Hillsborough County Sheriffs Office at many schools around the county Known as School Resource Officers they provide armed security along with other services where they are assigned 26 Other jurisdictions assist with service calls in a backup capacity These agencies include Plant City Police Department Temple Terrace Police Department and Tampa Police Department During some local school sponsored sporting events the district will utilize the Florida Highway Patrol USF Police Department and Tampa Airport Police Department in conjunction with the other agencies to provide security Since the school sponsored events are generally served by off duty law enforcement officers other local agencies may also be present citation needed Gates Foundation grant editIn 2009 the Hillsborough County School District was awarded a 100 million dollar grant by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to improve education through improved mentoring and evaluation of teachers 27 For six years the grant funded the Empowering Effective Teachers plan 28 Empowering Effective Teachers edit Empowering Effective Teachers was an initiative to promote improvements in education in the school district by increasing effective teaching through new teacher assessments salary scales teacher training programs and recruitment 29 The early phases of the initiative rolled out in 2010 when the district s teacher evaluation form was radically redeveloped into a complex rubric with four areas of focus and multiple subpoints within each area 30 The new evaluation standard caused an uproar in the district mainly due to how classroom evaluations have been implemented since the plan s roll out 31 Across the state of Florida 40 percent of a teacher s final evaluation score now is determined by calculating students learning growth from one year to the next and a similar policy has been implemented across other states citation needed In response to the increased demands placed on teachers by the new evaluation system teachers who opted into the new system would receive a pay increase The initial increase for most was at least a few thousand dollars with those earning evaluation scores of 4 or 5 receiving an additional 2 000 or 3 000 each year respectively The new pay scale was released at the end of 2013 and all teachers hired before 2011 had a few months to evaluate the new pay scale for deciding if they would opt in 32 Teachers who did not opt in were not exempt from the new evaluation system however their pay would not be affected by their final evaluation score References edit Hillsborough County Public Schools U S Department of Education HCPS 19 20 Tentative Budget Website PDF Home HCTA 2020 Census School District Reference Map Hillsborough County FL PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 1 2022 Text list Characteristics of the 100 Largest Public Elementary and Secondary School Districts in the United States 2003 04 nces ed gov Retrieved January 11 2018 a b Hillsborough names Van Ayres permanent school superintendent WUSF November 3 2023 Retrieved April 11 2024 Shircliffe Barbara J 2012 Rethinking Turner v Keefe The Parallel Mobilization of African American and White Teachers in Tampa Florida 1936 1946 History of Education Quarterly 52 99 136 doi 10 1111 j 1748 5959 2011 00374 x S2CID 142501177 a b Lengthang Marlene August 19 2021 Over 10 000 students in Florida school district isolated or quarantined a week into school year ABC News Retrieved August 23 2021 https www hillsboroughschools org cms lib FL50000635 Centricity Domain 4 DemographicReport pdf bare URL PDF Hillsborough County School Board Van Ayres takes over full time as Hillsborough County superintendent baynews9 com Retrieved April 11 2024 Superintendent s Office Superintendent www hillsboroughschools org Retrieved April 11 2024 Meet Hillsborough s new school superintendent Addison Davis Tampa Bay Times Florida Senate Bill CS HB1467 1 Library Media Services Poetry Jam Hillsborough County Public Schools Retrieved November 27 2022 Library Media Services SLAM Showcase Hillsborough County Public Schools Retrieved November 27 2022 Community Atlas PDF The History of Glover School Campus Retrieved November 24 2017 Nicholson Dave March 31 2013 Cork Strawberry school alumni to reunite Retrieved November 24 2017 Cribb Robert April 6 2008 The Strawberry Schools Retrieved November 24 2017 a b c d Martin John March 20 2001 Chronology Retrieved November 24 2017 Days III Drew S January 1 1992 The Other Desegregation Story Eradicating the Dual School System in Hillsborough County Florida Retrieved November 24 2017 Dolan Mary January 16 1989 Two who ended segregation join King tribute St Petersburg Times Kimmel Elinor Hillsborough County School Desegregation Busing and Black High Schools in Tampa Florida April 1971 September 1971 University of South Florida Retrieved May 10 2020 Tampa Schools Fail to End Desegregation Order The New York Times AP October 29 1998 Retrieved November 24 2017 Hillsborough County Public Schools Homepage Hillsborough school board accepts 100M Gates grant Breaking Tampa Bay Florida and national news and weather from Tampa Bay Online and The Tampa Tribune TBO com Hillsborough schools to dismantle Gates funded system that cost millions to develop Tampa Bay Times Retrieved June 11 2020 The Empowering Effective Teachers initiative is transforming the way that Hillsborough County Public Schools hires supports evaluates and compensates teachers This bold initiative has put our school district in the national spotlight as a leader in school reform and as a model of collaboration Archived from the original on March 16 2014 Retrieved February 9 2014 Classroom Teacher Evaluation Instrument PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved February 9 2014 2013 2014 Bargaining amp Ratification Q amp A Retrieved February 9 2014 2013 2014 Bargaining amp Ratification Q amp A PDF Hillsborough CTA Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 9 2014 External links edit nbsp Florida portal nbsp Schools portal Official website List of all Hillsborough County schools by area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hillsborough County Public Schools amp oldid 1223341049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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