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List of Dallas Independent School District schools

This is the list of schools of the Dallas Independent School District. For more information on the district, see the main article: Dallas Independent School District.

High Schools edit

The following are some of the senior high schools located within the district.[1] Schools are located in the city of Dallas unless otherwise stated. Classifications are based on their classes in football for the 2022-23 alignment by the University Interscholastic League, a state entity for academic and athletic competition among public schools. For football, schools are ranked into one of six "classes," based on enrollment, with 6A representing the largest schools and 1A the smallest.

6A edit

5A edit

Division 1 (D1) edit

D2 edit

4A edit

D1 edit

D2 edit

3A edit

Other edit

K-8 schools edit

List of Dallas ISD K-8 schools
Name City Notes
George Bannerman Dealey Montessori Academy Dallas The school selects students on the basis of academic ability. Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer described its acceptance rate as being low like that of Harvard University.[2] It is named after George Bannerman Dealey.
Eduardo Mata Montessori School Dallas The school selects students based on their residence in the district instead of by academics: With students in the Mount Auburn Elementary zone having first priority, Woodrow Wilson High zone students having second priority, and other students after that.[2] Neighborhoods with priority for Mata Montessori include Greenland Hills ("M Streets"), Junius Heights, and Lakewood.[3] Mata was a neighborhood elementary school, Eduardo Mata Elementary School, serving grades 4 through 6, upon its 1997 opening. Its initial enrollment was 600, but it declined down to more than 200 students in 2013, since in 2007 6th graders were reassigned to J. L. Long Middle and Lipscomb Elementary School began taking 4th grade students the following year. In 2014 it was converted into a Montessori choice school.[2]
Rosemont Upper and Lower School Dallas Rosemont School is located in North Oak Cliff. It has two parts, the Lower – Chris V. Semos Building for grades pre-kindergarten through 2 and the Upper School for grades 3 through 5. It opened in 1922 as Rosemont Elementary School, with the current lower school opening in 2005. It gained its middle school in 2012.[4] In 2015 of The Dallas Morning News wrote that it had "strong academics, passionate students and devoted parents" and that it "is considered a neighborhood gem in North Oak Cliff".[5] There are high income White American families in North Oak Cliff who send their children to Rosemont due to the magnet program; overall 66% of the students as of 2018 were classified as low income.[6] The parents stated that principal Anna Brining had worked to make the school strong; in 2015 DISD notified Brining that her contract will not be renewed.[5]

The Rosemont Early Childhood Parent-Teacher Association or RECPTA is focused on fundraising for Rosemont;[6] originally known as the Rosemont Preschool Association, it as of 2010 was the oldest parent-teacher association of an early childhood program as it was first established in 1926. In the local area the nickname for the group is the "Mommy Mafia".[7] RECPTA holds an auction party each year, with about $30,000 netted per session.[8] In 2018 the organization had tension between the board, which wished to use funds to benefit other schools, and the membership, which wanted the board to solely focus on Rosemont.[6]

Solar Preparatory School for Girls at James B. Bonham Dallas It is located in East Dallas, across from Vickery Place. In 2016 the Bonham elementary campus was repurposed as an all-girls elementary and middle school devoted to STEAM.[9]
Harry Stone Montessori School Dallas The school selects students on the basis of academic ability. Nicholson described its acceptance rate as being low like that of Harvard University.[2]
The Medical District BioMedical School Dallas The school Offers a STEM program based on biomedical science & is located on the ut southwestern campus
Walnut Hill International Leadership Academy Dallas Formerly Walnut Hill Elementary School

Middle schools edit

List of Dallas ISD middle schools
Name City Notes
William Hawley Atwell Middle School Dallas
Young Women's STEAM Academy at Balch Springs Middle School Balch Springs Young Women's STEAM Academy at Balch Springs Middle School is in Balch Springs.[10][11] It, as Balch Springs Middle School, was scheduled to open in 2012,[12] and was originally coeducational. It was repurposed in 2016 as a zoned girls' school.[13] Dallas ISD and Parkland Balch Springs Youth & Family Health Center is on a site next to the school building,[14] on the school property.[15][16] It serves disadvantaged children who do not have primary care physicians.[14] Previously the center was known as the Spruce Youth and Family Health Center and housed on the grounds of H. Grady Spruce High. On June 3, 2013, it moved to its current location and changed its name.[15]
T.W. Browne Middle School Dallas
E.B. Comstock Middle School Dallas
Billy Earl Dade Middle School Dallas Billy Earl Dade Middle School is in the Fair Park area in South Dallas.[17] The school merged with Pearl C. Anderson Middle School, and opened in a new $36 million building in August 2013. In 2015 Nicholson stated that the combination of the two hostile student populations and poor administration from DISD's central office caused it to become, for a period, "Dallas' Worst Public School".[18]
Dallas Environmental Science Academy (DESA) Dallas As of 2020 it had about 461 students.[19] Prior to 2018 plans were drawn up for a new building, but several DISD board members opposed this on the grounds that the neighborhood schools around it needed renovation or replacement and that only focusing on the magnet school would anger local residents.[20]
Young Men's Leadership Academy at Fred Florence Middle School Dallas Young Men's Leadership Academy at Fred Florence Middle School is in Pleasant Grove. It was previously Fred F. Florence Middle School, a coeducational middle school which had about 850 students in 2016. That year it became a boys' zoned school.[13]
Benjamin Franklin Middle School Dallas The school serves:[21] portions of the Preston Hollow area, including the "Estate area",[22] as well as the Janmar area,[23] and a portion of Addison.[24] It is named after Benjamin Franklin.
Hector P. Garcia Middle School Dallas It was built in 2007.[25]
W. H. Gaston Middle School Dallas
W. E. Greiner Exploratory Arts Academy Dallas
Robert H. Hill Middle School Dallas
Oliver W. Holmes Middle School Dallas
Zan Wesley Holmes Jr. Middle School Dallas Zan Wesley Holmes Jr. Middle School is located in Oak Cliff,[26] and also serves a section of Cockrell Hill.[27][28] It was scheduled to open in 2012.[12] Its namesake, who advocated for area public schools, is a pastor.[17]
D.A. Hulcy STEAM Middle School Dallas D.A. Hulcy STEAM Middle School - Students are selected on the basis of geographic location. It opened in 2015.[2]
Ignite Middle School Dallas
Kennedy-Curry Middle School Dallas Kennedy-Curry Middle School is in South Dallas, and serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, Wilmer, almost all of Hutchins, and a small section of Lancaster.[24][29] It opened in fall 1968 as a part of the Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District (WHISD).[30] It closed in 2005 due to the closure of WHISD. Dallas ISD, which took over the WHISD schools, had renovated Kennedy-Curry and expanded it by almost 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2). Funds from the 2008 $1.35 billion bond were used to overhaul the Wilmer-Hutchins schools. In 2011 DISD re-opened Kennedy Curry.[31] Its namesakes are John F. Kennedy and Bishop College president Milton K. Curry.[32]
Harold W. Lang Middle School Dallas
J. L. Long Middle School Dallas Neighborhoods within the attendance boundary include:[33] Greenland Hills (M Streets),[34] Junius Heights,[35] Lakewood,[36] Lower Greenville,[37] Munger Place,[38] almost all of Swiss Avenue,[39] and Vickery Place.[40] The school in 2015 was over capacity, with its usage at 127%.[41] In 2011 the school stopped allowing students to carry backpacks due to the fact that it lost security guards as a result of DISD budget cuts.[42]
Henry W. Longfellow Career Exploration Academy Dallas
Thomas C. Marsh Middle School Dallas Marsh serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, portions of Farmers Branch in DISD.[43][44] By 2015 a "personalized learning" program was established there.[2]
Francisco "Pancho" Medrano Middle School Dallas The school uses a geothermal cooling system instead of a regular HVAC system. It was established as part of a 2008 bond.[45]
Piedmont G.L.O.B.A.L. Academy Dallas Piedmont G.L.O.B.A.L. Academy (formerly John B. Hood Middle School) - In 2012 it had a capacity of about 1,430 students but an enrollment of 1,441. That year it was relieved by the opening of Richards Middle.[26]
Raúl Quintanilla Middle School Dallas The school, in addition to sections of Dallas, serves sections of Cockrell Hill.[27][46] It was named after the Greater Dallas Hispanic Chamber of Commerce chairperson and a NationsBank senior vice president. The capacity was 1,200.[47]
Ann Richards Middle School Dallas Ann Richards Middle School is in Pleasant Grove.[26] Scheduled to open in 2012,[12] it relieved John B. Hood Middle (now Piedmont Academy).[26] It is named after former Governor of Texas Ann Richards.
Thomas J. Rusk Middle School Dallas Rusk serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, a portion of Highland Park.[48][49]
Seagoville Middle School Dallas Seagoville Middle School is in Dallas, and serves most of Seagoville and the Dallas County portion of Combine.[24][50]
Alex W. Spence Talented/Gifted Academy Dallas Downtown Dallas (inside the loop) is within the Spence attendance zone.[51][52]
L. V. Stockard Middle School Dallas The school, in addition to sections of Dallas, serves sections of Cockrell Hill.[27][53]
Boude Storey Middle School Dallas
Sam Tasby Middle School Dallas Sam Tasby Middle School is in Vickery Meadow, and it, with Jack Lowe Elementary, share a single campus and several common areas; the two schools have their designated entrances in the school building.[54] Tasby opened in August 2006.[55] Tasby, built with $20 million, relieved Franklin Middle School.[54] The lot which Tasby and Lowe occupied used to be The Villas at Vickery, a retail and residential complex built in 1976.[56]
Ewell D. Walker Middle School Dallas Walker serves:[57] portions of the Preston Hollow area,[22] and portions of Addison and Carrollton.[24]

Elementary schools edit

  • John Q. Adams Elementary School
  • Nathan Adams Elementary School
  • Birdie Alexander Elementary School
  • Gabe P. Allen New Tech Academy
  • William Anderson Elementary School
  • Arcadia Park Elementary School
  • Arlington Park Early Childhood Center
  • Bayles Elementary School
  • Mary McLeod Bethune Elementary School
  • William A. Blair Elementary School
  • Annie Webb Blanton Elementary School
  • Felix G. Botello Elementary School
  • James Bowie Elementary School
  • Jimmie Tyler Brashear Elementary School
  • John Neely Bryan Elementary School
  • Harrell Budd Elementary School
  • Rufus C. Burleson Elementary School
  • David G. Burnet Elementary School. In 2021, 98% of the students are considered economically disadvantaged.[58]
  • George H. W. Bush Elementary School is in Addison. The Town of Addison asked Dallas ISD to build Bush with environmentally sensitive materials.[59] The PreK-5 school was built as part of a bond approved in May 2008. Bush is adjacent to the Greenhill School and is located along Addison's trail system; therefore the school will be accessible by bicycle or on foot from the Les Lacs and Midway Meadows subdivisions. Bush has a first floor with 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2) of space and a second floor with 30,000 square feet (2,800 m2) of space.[60] Bush has two athletic fields located north of the playgrounds. During non-school hours Addison residents may use the fields.[61]
  • W.W. Bushman Elementary School
  • F.P. Caillet Elementary School
  • Adelfa Botello Callejo Elementary School is in Pleasant Grove.[62] Scheduled to open in 2012,[12] it relieved San Jacinto Elementary School. Its surroundings include single and multi-family housing and industrial buildings.[26] All of the initial employees, including principal Sandra Fernandez, were reassigned to Callejo from the former Bonham Elementary School as the latter had closed.[62] Its namesake, who did activism, worked as a lawyer.[17]
  • John W. Carpenter Elementary School
  • C.F. Carr Elementary School
  • Casa View Elementary School
  • Cedar Crest Elementary School - Previously known as Albert Sidney Johnson Elementary School but renamed on July 1, 2018 as the former namesake was a general in the Confederate States of America (CSA).[63][64]
  • Central Elementary School (Seagoville)
  • Chapel Hill Preparatory School (Farmers Branch[43][65]) - Previously known as William L. Cabell Elementary School but renamed on July 1, 2018 as the former namesake, Mayor of Dallas William Lewis Cabell, was a general in the Confederate States of America (CSA).[63][64] Its current namesake is the community of Chapel Hill.[66]
  • Cesar Chavez Learning Center - It is in proximity to Downtown Dallas and had a planned initial enrollment of 891.[67]
  • Leonides Gonzalez Cigarroa, M.D. Elementary School
  • Nancy J. Cochran Elementary School
  • S.S. Conner Elementary School
  • Leila P. Cowart Elementary School
  • Gilbert Cuellar Sr. Elementary School
  • Everette L. DeGolyer Elementary School
  • Lorenzo De Zavala Elementary School
  • L. O. Donald Elementary School - In addition to serving sections of Dallas, it serves a part of Cockrell Hill.[27][68]
  • Julius Dorsey Elementary School
  • Frederick Douglass Elementary School
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar Learning Center is in South Dallas, near Fair Park. In 2016 it had 594 students, with 592 of them being classified as being from poor families. Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer wrote that "staggering" unemployment, "Broken families", and "parents with criminal records characterize the neighborhood.[69] In the 2014-2015 school year, Texas education authorities classified it as a failing school. As part of a reform effort, the district classified Dunbar as a "community school" in 2016 in which the district would take a holistic approach in recognizing that the surroundings affects the education studentes receive.[69]
  • J.N. Ervin Elementary School
  • Stephen C. Foster Elementary School
  • Anne Frank Elementary School in Far North Dallas serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, portions of Addison.[24][70] It opened in August 1997 as the first U.S. school to be named after Anne Frank. The first principal, Jonnice Legum Berns, was still in that position in 2010. As part of the theme, the school has multiple books about Frank, and its mascot is the scribe. As of 2010 it had 1,287 students, with 68.5% being Hispanic or Latino, 24.2% being Black, 5.1% being White, 2% being Asian, and 0.2% being American Indian. 86.3% were classified as being from poor families.[71]
  • Geneva Heights Elementary School is in Lower Greenville,[37] and it also serves Vickery Place.[72][73] It was previously known as Robert E. Lee Elementary School but renamed on July 1, 2018 as the former namesake was a general in the Confederacy.[63][64] Circa 2007 the school was known for high staff retention periods to the point where a teacher who had been at the school for fewer than ten years was considered to be a newcomer. At one time enrollment was 250, but it later got a peak enrollment of almost 600. Enrollment declined by 2007 partly because some apartment complexes housing children were razed. In addition Park Lane Elementary opened, serving areas previously zoned to Lee. By 2007 the enrollment was about 250, 30% from outside of the school's attendance zone, with enrollment being about 45% of the building's capacity and with only the ground floor in use. There were 18 students per teacher.[74] Keri Mitchell of The Advocate Lakewood/East Dallas wrote that a 2007 campaign to attract more neighborhood families "fizzled".[75] In 2012 the enrollment was 58% of the building's capacity. It was scheduled to absorb the population of the former Bonham Elementary School later that year.[26] Mitchell wrote that the absorption of Bonham students added "engaged families" to the school community.[75] In addition, during the principalship of Ali Saiyed, the school added a dual language program.[75] In 2014 Lee had 362 students, with 71% being classified as low income and with about 83% being racial and ethnic minorities. At that time few parents from the single family houses in the area sent their children to the school. DISD planned to introduce the International Baccalaureate (IB) program to attract families to the school.[76] In 2014 Mitchell described the new principal, Bridget Ransom, as being "energetic" and a factor that could make the school more popular.[75] 2015 Nicholson wrote that the IB program made the school more popular in the community.[2] The district planned to retain the original building from 1931,[77] and by 2023 the other buildings were razed so new construction could take its place. The ex-Jill Stone Elementary building served as a temporary campus.[78]
  • Tom C. Gooch Elementary School is in Dallas. It serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, portions of Farmers Branch in DISD.[43][79]
  • Charles A. Gill Elementary School
  • Henry B. Gonzalez Personalized Learning Academy
  • Tom C. Gooch Elementary School
  • Frank Guzick Elementary School
  • Lenore Kirk Hall Elementary School
  • Ebby Halliday Elementary School - It opened in 2011 and was named for a businessperson and real estate agent.[17]
  • N.W. Harllee Early Childhood Center
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne Elementary School
  • Margaret B. Henderson Elementary School
  • Montessori Academy at Onesimo Hernandez
  • Victor H. Hexter Elementary School
  • Highland Meadows Elementary School
  • James S. Hogg Elementary School is in the north part of Oak Cliff. In 2015 the school had 280 students, with 50% of them natively speaking Spanish and with over 90% of the total being Hispanic and/or Latino. In 2016 it established a two-way English-Spanish bilingual education program, partly due to the Hispanic and Latino presence at the school.[80] In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six "decision point" schools which could be closed in the future due to a low student population.[20]
  • H.I. Holland Elementary School at Lisbon
  • Lida Hooe Elementary School
  • L. L. Hotchkiss Elementary School - In 1991 Dallas ISD officials proposed that Hotchkiss Elementary School reopen as a neighborhood school during the 1992-1993 school year. The Montessori program previously at Hotchkiss would be moved to Dealey Elementary School. The proposed attendance zone for Hotchkiss was a triangular area bounded by Fair Oaks Avenue, Northwest Highway, and White Rock Creek.[81] The proposed Hotchkiss neighborhood would relieve Kramer, Pershing, Preston Hollow, and Dan D. Rogers schools.[82] In 1992 federal judge Barefoot Sanders blocked the reopening of Hotchkiss,[83] so school board members filed an appeal with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.[84] In 1994 Hotchkiss re-opened as a neighborhood school. The school expected to receive 875 students; it actually received almost 925. The school had to use 17 portable classrooms, and two classrooms had to be converted into food storage rooms. Judy Zimny, the principal of Hotchkiss, said that most of the students came from the apartments in the Abrams Road, Northwest Highway, and Skillman Road area. The school was 42% black, 38% Hispanic, and 20% White. The school is located within what was then a mostly-White residential neighborhood, but in 1994 most of the White students to Hotchkiss were bussed in from other locations. About 100 students from other areas were voluntarily enrolled in Hotchkiss so Hotchkiss's racial demographics were more balanced.[85]
  • Sam Houston Elementary School a.k.a. Personalized Learning Preparatory at Sam Houston is in Oak Lawn, Dallas. The current Sam Houston Elementary campus was scheduled to open in the northern hemisphere fall of 1999.[86] In 2014-2015 its student body was 95% low income; despite that it exceeded its "performance targets". Due to gentrification, Sam Houston's enrollment declined to 201 students in the 2015-2016 school year while it had 302 students in the 2011-2012 school year.[2]
  • John Ireland Elementary School
  • Eddie Bernice Johnson Elementary School (Wilmer) - Opened in 2020.[87]
  • Anson Jones Elementary School - In addition to serving sections of Dallas, it serves a part of Cockrell Hill.[27][88]
  • Barbara Jordan Elementary School
  • Jerry R. Junkins Elementary School is in Carrollton. Named after a former CEO of Texas Instruments, it opened on August 14, 2006.[89]
  • Louise Wolff Kahn Elementary School is in west Oak Cliff/South Dallas, and a businessperson is its namesake.[90]
  • Edwin J. Kiest Elementary School
  • Martin Luther King Jr. Learning Center
  • Kleberg Elementary School
  • Obadiah Knight Elementary School
  • Arthur Kramer Elementary School is in North Dallas. It serves the Janmar area.[23][91] In 1989 the DISD board proposed the re-opening of Arthur Kramer Elementary School. Under the plan, portions of the attendance boundaries of Pershing, Preston Hollow, and Rogers would have been modified.[92] In 1991 the Kramer, Pershing, and Preston Hollow schools had a combined total of 32 portable buildings to house excess students. Parents from those schools supported plans to re-open Hotchkiss Elementary School as a neighborhood school, so it could house excess students.[93]
  • Richard Lagow Elementary School
  • Lakewood Elementary School is in Lakewood, Dallas, first established in 1951. Its original building could house around 500-550 students. Circa 1984 the school first started installing temporary buildings to accommodate an increased enrollment.[94] In 2012 Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer stated that Lakewood Elementary had "superb" academics, citing its regular appearance as an exemplary-ranked school by the Texas Education Agency and how its test scores were far superior to DISD and state averages.[95] In 2014 the school had 853 students with 17% classified as being low income; 76% were non-Hispanic white.[76] As of 2016, 96% of the student body was not low-income, making it the only DISD school with 80% or more non-low income students, and it was also the school with the highest percentage of Anglo White students in the school district.[96] In 2015 Nicholson wrote that Lakewood elementary parents are perennially opposed to changing the school's attendance zone and that they "are fiercely protective of their successful but carefully gerrymandered neighborhood" institution.[2] In 2014 other DISD board members opposed a proposal from fellow board member Bernadette Nuttall to rezone some houses zoned to Lakewood to Mata and Mount Auburn schools.[97] Due to overcrowding, by 2014 the Lakewood Elementary Expansion Fund (LEEF) generated $500,000 to fund an architectural plan for an expansion,[98] and DISD proposed a "Bridge Plan" to allow for the expansion of the school.[99] In 2013 parents began a campaign to raise $15 million for expanding Lakewood, wanting to replace its older facility and the portable buildings that housed over half of Lakewood Elementary's students.[95]
  • Sidney Lanier Expressive Arts Vanguard
  • Umphrey Lee Elementary School
  • William Lipscomb Elementary School is in Junius Heights.[100] In addition to that neighborhood it also serves Munger Place and Swiss Avenue. By 2008 DISD made the school only serve grades Pre-Kindergarten through 3, with grades 4 and 5 from the Lipscomb zone assigned to Mata Elementary. By that year parents campaigned for the return of grades 4 and 5 to Lipscomb.[101] In 2008 Lipscomb began serving the 4th grade.[2] As of 2019 Lipscomb now serves all elementary grades.
  • Jack Lowe, Sr. Elementary School is in Vickery Meadow and shares a single campus and several common areas with Tasby Middle; the two schools have their designated entrances in the school building.[54] Lowe has 89,000 square feet (8,300 m2) of space with 34 classrooms.[102] In August 2006 Lowe Elementary, built with $12 million, opened with kindergartenfifth grade, relieving Hexter, L.L. Hotchkiss, Kramer, Robert E. Lee, Preston Hollow, and Dan D. Rogers elementary schools.[102][56]
  • B.H. Macon Elementary School
  • Maple Lawn Elementary School is in Dallas. Maple Lawn serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, a portion of Highland Park.[48][103] As of 2020 the school had fewer than 500 students. Maple Lawn was, in a period one of 19 not named after a person, while the district had 230 schools at this point. The school, initially in the Maple Lawn Independent School District, was formed in the 1900s by a consolidation of the Cochran Chapel school and the Maple Avenue School. The name was given by a child who suggested the name as part of a contest in exchange for $1. A two storey brick building was constructed on donated land with $10,000 raised by a bond. DISD annexed MLISD in 1922.[104]
  • Herbert Marcus Elementary School
  • Thomas L. Marsalis Elementary School
  • Eladio R. Martinez Learning Center
  • José "Joe" May Elementary School - Near Lake Bachman and opened in 2012, it is named after an ex-DISD board member.[17]
  • Ronald Erwin McNair Elementary School
  • Lee A. McShan, Jr. Elementary School is in Vickery Meadow. McShan, located on an 8.2-acre (33,000 m2) site, includes 89,666 square feet (8,330.2 m2) of space with 33 core classrooms, three special education classrooms, dedicated classrooms for art, science, and technology classes, a 400-seat auditorium, and a gymnasium. In 2005 McShan, built with $12 million as part of a 2002 bond program,[105] opened with 737 students,[55] from pre-Kindergartensixth grade; the sixth grade would be transferred to the middle school the following year.[105]
  • Esperanza "Hope" Medrano Elementary School
  • Ben Milam Elementary School - In 2018 Eva-Marie Ayala of Dallas Morning News identified it as the elementary school which covers most of Downtown Dallas.[20] As of 2020 it serves almost all of Downtown Dallas.[106] It opened in 1912 as the Fairland School.[107] By 2015 gentrification was occurring in the area, which had the possibility of causing enrollment figures to decline.[2] In 2018 many of the fewer than 300 students did not originate from its attendance zone." Ayala wrote that Milam "has limited space to grow much more if a new specialized program was offered there."[20] In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six "decision point" schools which could be closed due to a low student population.[20]
  • William Brown Miller Elementary School
  • Mockingbird Elementary School is located in Lower Greenville,[37] and also serves Greenland Hills (the "M Streets"),[108] and is in proximity to it.[3] Its campus has a capacity of about 400 students.[97] It was Previously known as Stonewall Jackson Elementary School but renamed on July 1, 2018 as the former namesake was a general in the Confederacy.[63][64] Mockingbird houses Dallas ISD's deaf program for elementary school. In previous periods it had about 100 districtwide deaf students and 100 zoned families, but by 2007 the school's popularity among neighborhood parents increased.[74] The school, as of 2005, gives American Sign Language instruction to all students. In addition most employees, including the principal and all teachers, also had knowledge of ASL. Principles and Methods of Adapted Physical Education and Recreation (2005 edition) states that the "unique and exceptional efforts in educating all children" enrolled resulted in the school receiving the Blue Ribbon Award in 1999.[109]
  • Maria Moreno Elementary School
  • Nancy Moseley Elementary School
  • Mount Auburn Elementary School a.k.a. Mount Auburn STEAM Academy - In 2015 almost all of the students were Hispanic and Latino, and most were economically disadvantaged.[2]
  • Clara Oliver Elementary School
  • George Peabody Elementary School
  • Elisha M. Pease Elementary School
  • John F. Peeler Elementary School - In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six "decision point" schools which could be closed in the future due to a low student population.[20]
  • John J. Pershing Elementary School is in North Dallas, within Preston Hollow., and serving a part of Old Preston Hollow.[22][110]
  • Pleasant Grove Elementary School
  • K.B. Polk Center for Academically Talented and Gifted
  • Preston Hollow Elementary School
  • John H. Reagan Elementary School
  • Martha Turner Reilly Elementary School
  • Reinhardt Elementary School
  • Joseph J. Rhoads Learning Center
  • Charles Rice Learning Center, located in the Queen City area of South Dallas, is in a red brick, two story building. As part of reforms encouraged by U.S. District Judge Barefoot Sanders, DISD increased the school day length and increased teacher salaries in schools designated as "learning centers" which included Rice.[111] In 2015 Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer stated that Rice is "generally regarded by parents as" the best elementary school in South Dallas.[18] According to Nicholson, "regard Charles Rice as a local gem, but its reputation for quality doesn't extend much further than that" partly due to the school's high level of student poverty and partly due to the poor reputation of South Dallas.[112] The school, which as of 2015 had 98% of its students designated as having free or reduced lunch (a marker of being poor), had the highest 2013-2015 School Effectiveness Index (SEI), an internal DISD school index that determines how well a school is performing relative to its community demographics.[112] Nicholson wrote in March 2016 that the SEI ranking "perennially puts Charles Rice neck and neck with [Lakewood Elementary in the Lakewood neighborhood in East Dallas] as the district's best non-magnet school" even though Rice's raw test scores, while above the DISD average, were far below Lakewood's.[111] As of 2015 Rice had earned three of five distinctions from the Texas Education Agency (TEA).[112] While many low income schools have a lot of teacher turnover, Rice, as of 2016, has an average teacher tenure of 23.3 years.[111]
  • Thelma Elizabeth Page Richardson Elementary School is located in Pleasant Grove. Named after a teacher, it opened in 2013.[17]
  • Oran M. Roberts Elementary School is located in the Fair Park area.[17] The previous campus closed in 2012 with a new campus opening in August 2013.[26] The former school building was demolished.[113]
  • Dan D. Rogers Elementary School
  • Edna Rowe Elementary School
  • John W. Runyon Elementary School
  • Clinton P. Russell Elementary School
  • Arturo Salazar Elementary School
  • Julian T. Saldivar Elementary School
  • San Jacinto Elementary School is in Pleasant Grove.[114] In 2012 it had an official capacity of 551, but it had 690 enrolled students. Callejo Elementary opened in 2012 to relieve it.[26] REAL School Gardens, a Fort Worth company, installed a school garden circa 2015.[114]
  • Alex Sanger Preparatory School, formerly Alex Sanger Elementary School, is in Forest Hills.[115]
    • In 2013 the majority of the students came from English as a second language and working class backgrounds. That year, the assistant city manager of Dallas had her child at Sanger but later withdrew the child, and Rudy Bush of The Dallas Morning News wrote an op-ed explaining her reasoning for doing so. According to Joe Tone of the Dallas Observer, there were multiple parents at Sanger who felt the op-ed was unfair.[116] Tim Rogers of D Magazine also criticized the Bush story.[117] According to Rogers, the article "did grievous damage to" DISD and to Sanger.[115]
  • School for the Talented and Gifted in Pleasant Grove
  • Seagoville Elementary School is in Seagoville, and also serves the Dallas County portion of Combine.[24][118]
  • Seagoville North Elementary School is in Seagoville. It was scheduled to open in 2012,[12] due to an increasing population in Seagoville.[26]
  • Ascher Silberstein Elementary School
  • Larry G. Smith Elementary School
  • Solar Preparatory School for Boys
  • Solar Preparatory School for Girls
  • Celestino Mauricio Soto Jr. Elementary School - In addition to serving sections of Dallas, it serves a part of Cockrell Hill.[27][119]
  • J.P. Starks Elementary School (also J. P. Starks Math, Science and Technology Vanguard) is in East Oak Cliff.[111]
  • Leslie A. Stemmons Elementary School
  • Stevens Park Elementary School
  • Jill Stone Elementary School at Vickery Meadow is in Vickery Midtown (formerly Vickery Meadow). Stone Elementary includes two main buildings, with one including the administrative offices, the media center, and several classrooms and the other including common areas and public function facilities, and modular classroom buildings with individual telephone and toilet facilities.[120] The two story main Stone building has outdoor stairwells and faces an inner courtyard. Jayne Noble Suhler of The Dallas Morning News said "[i]n a neighborhood of apartments, [Stone Elementary] fits right in[...]"[86] Vickery Meadows Elementary School opened as the first school in Vickery Meadow;[120] in 2005 it was renamed Jill Stone Elementary School at Vickery Meadow.[121] When it opened, Vickery Meadows Elementary took in 400 students. Previously students who were bussed to other campuses in the Dallas area were now able to walk to their zoned schools. As of 1998, all students at Vickery Meadows Elementary were immersed in completely English classes for eight weeks before being placed in bilingual or ESL classes. The district anticipated that the school would be 75% Hispanic.[86]
  • C.A. Tatum Jr. Elementary School
  • T.G. Terry Elementary School
  • Robert L. Thornton Elementary School
  • Edward Titche Elementary School is in Pleasant Grove. In 2015 it was over capacity with forty portable buildings to house excess students. During that year a bond proposal included a new campus for Titche.[97]
  • Thomas Tolbert Elementary School
  • Trinity Heights Talented and Gifted
  • George W. Truett Elementary School
  • Adelle Turner Elementary School
  • Mark Twain School for the Talented and Gifted - In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six "decision point" schools which could be closed in the future due to a low student population.[20]
  • Urban Park Elementary School
    • A replacement campus began construction in 2024.[122]
  • Daniel Webster Elementary School
  • Martin Weiss Elementary School
  • Sudie L. Williams Talented and Gifted Academy
  • Wilmer-Hutchins Elementary School is located in South Dallas and serves, in addition to sections of Dallas, almost all of Hutchins, and a small section of Lancaster.[24][123] Previously it also included a portion of Wilmer.[24][124] The school opened in 2011 to serve areas of the former Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District.[31]
  • Winnetka Elementary School
  • Harry C. Withers Elementary School is in North Dallas and serves a section of Preston Hollow.[22][125] It has a Spanish-English dual-language programthat as of 2013 this program has a waiting list; the school has a lottery system to determine which out-of-boundary students may attend. In 1982 the school only had 80 students, so the district closed it, but after the area school-aged population increased, DISD opened the school again in 1990.[126]
  • Whitney M. Young Jr. Elementary School
  • Ignacio Zaragoza Elementary School - A few buildings in Downtown Dallas are in the school's attendance boundary.[127]

Preschools edit

  • Wilmer Early Childhood Center - Wilmer - It occupies the former Wilmer Hutchins ISD Wilmer Elementary School.[128][129] It opened in 2015.[130]

Former schools edit

Former high schools edit

  • Norman Robert Crozier Technical High School (the school was known by many names)
    • Dallas High School 1907–1916
    • Main High School 1916–1917
    • Bryan Street High School 1917–1928
    • Dallas Technical High School 1928–1942
    • Crozier Technical High School 1942–1971 (school closed in June 1971, next year most went to Skyline HS 7777 Forney road. Some students that came from Crozier Tech negotiated with DISD to show the diplomas as N.R. Crozier Technical High School up to the year 1975)
    • Business and Management Magnet Center 1975-May 1995 (School relocated to Townview Center May 1995)
  • Pleasant Grove High School 1953–1957 (the school had been in existence since 1939 but was in Pleasant Grove ISD until that district was absorbed into Dallas ISD in 1953. Today the campus is used by John Quincy Adams Elementary School)
  • Forest Avenue High School 1916–1956 (was converted from a whites-only school to an African-American school and renamed James Madison High School, and the white students were sent to Crozier Tech)[131]
  • Rylie High School 1956–1963 (converted to a junior high and replaced with H. Grady Spruce High School)
  • A. Maceo Smith High School
  • E. D. Walker High School for pupils with disabilities - Later instead housed an elementary school program for advanced students[132]
  • A Health Special Alternative High School, for pregnant students was Constructed named Maya Angelou School[133]

Former middle schools edit

  • Pearl C. Anderson Middle School (closed 2013) - The school was in South Dallas.[26] Shortly after the closure, the school was targeted by thieves and vandals. In 2013 the Dallas County Appraisal District (DCAD) appraised the property's value as $208,100.[113]
  • Edward H. Cary Middle School was in North Dallas, and serves a section of the Preston Hollow area, including Old Preston Hollow or the "Estate area".[22][134] In 2019 the school had 500 students. In 2019 a strike from a tornado destroyed the school building. In the period until a new campus building is established, Franklin Middle School was scheduled to take about 60% of the students while the remainder were to go to Medrano Middle School.[135] It was disestablished in 2020.[136]
  • S. S. Conner Junior High School 1955–1964 (the S. S. Conner name was subsequently taken by an elementary school that opened in 1965)
  • Edison Middle Learning Center (closed 2018)[137] It was located in West Dallas and named after Thomas Edison. In 2018 it had scores in Texas state tests, considered unacceptable by the Texas Education Agency (TEA), for five consecutive years in a row. In 2018 the number of students was below half of the building's capacity;[138] in 2015 the utilization, the smallest in the district's traditional schools, was 32%. Hobbs and Hacker stated that "Not many families choose to send their children to the habitually low-performing school."[97] Every single student was classified as low income in the 2013-2014 school year, and by 2018 the percentage of such was 90%. The region of Dallas in which it was located was majority Hispanophone. The physical plant of the building was also deteriorating at that time. Bill Zeeble of described the last principal, Earl Gilmore, as the "last-chance principal".[138] In an attempt to keep the school open, DISD made Edison a "Accelerating Campus Excellence" (ACE) school.[138] However the district ultimately had the school closed in 2018; if DISD had not closed Edison that year, the State of Texas would have had the right to take action against Edison. As a result L. G. Pinkston High School expanded to grades 7-12 and absorbed the students.[137] In 2019, Edison began housing students from Jefferson High as the school's building sustained damage from a 2019 tornado.[135]
  • D. A. Hulcy Middle School - In the Red Bird community,[113] it closed in 2012,[26] due to a decline in the district's budget.[2] For a period DISD used it as a police training academy. In 2013 the DCAD appraised the value of the property at $11.1 million.[113] It became D.A. Hulcy STEAM Middle School in 2015.[2]
  • Maynard Jackson Middle School (closed 2011) - Prior to summer 2011 the community often complained about poor conditions at the school. DISD rezoned the students to Kennedy Curry Middle School in southern Dallas.[31][dead link]
  • Rylie Junior High School 1963–1978 (converted from the former Rylie High School; later closed and became a charter school[citation needed] in the 1980s)
  • Sequoyah Junior High School 1958–1969 (replaced by Thomas Edison Junior High School; Sequoyah was converted to an elementary campus)

Former primary schools edit

  • Addison School (closed 1966)
  • Alamo School (closed 1968)
  • Arlington Park Elementary School - Closed in 2012[26]
  • Stephen F. Austin School (opened in 1886 as East Dallas School; renamed Stephen F. Austin School in 1902; served as an elementary school until 1976, when the building was taken over by the High School for the Health Professions; the structure was razed around the year 2000) [139][140][141]
  • James B. Bonham Elementary School (Closed in 2012) - It served most of Vickery Place.[73][142] Bonham opened in 1923 as the Vickery Place School. Designed by C.D. Hill, the building's price was about $121,000. The school received its current name in December 1939. The Vickery Meadow Association wrote "We believe this was done to avoid confusion with the town of Vickery, which was annexed into DISD soon afterwards."[143] Bonham Elementary won the National Excellence in Urban Education Award in 2009 and the Blue Ribbon School Award in 2010, and the Texas Education Agency (TEA) ranked the campus as exemplary for several years. The school had above 200 students in the 2011-2012 school year, leading Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer to write that the school was "badly underused".[2] There were 22 students per teacher at that time, which was lower than the common ration of 27 to 1,[144] and underpopulation was one reason stated to close the school. The student population sharply declined as neighborhood gentrification occurred, and the inflation-adjusted median income increased by 80% from 1990 to 2010. Fewer school-age children lived in the area, with 580 residents 18 or younger in 2010, compared to 1,187 in 1990. The husband of the president of the Bonham parent-teacher association, Dave Walkington, stated that the district may have additionally selected Bonham as a way of telling the Texas Legislature that it needed additional funds and that high performing schools were in jeopardy. Additionally articles from local publications stated that DISD would have reductions in federal funding if it closed campuses with poor academic performance.[2] DISD board members stated that deciding to close a small school regardless of its academic performance would be a fair decision.[145] Students were rezoned to Robert E. Lee Elementary School, since renamed Geneva Heights Elementary School.[26][146] All of the final teaching employees, including principal Sandra Fernandez, were reassigned to Callejo Elementary, which had opened that year.[62] The physical building, post-closure, had sustained some vandalism. After the closure DISD immigration intake facility opened on the Bonham school grounds, but not in the main building. In 2013 the DCAD appraised the property's value as $6.7 million.[113] The Bonham campus became a female-only STEAM school in 2016.[9]
  • City Park Elementary School (Closed in 2012)[26] - City Park Elementary School in Cedars, named for its location across Old City Park, first opened in 1919,[147] and served the community until it closed.[148][149] As of 2013 it is used as an after-school program's classroom location.[150] In 2014 the nonprofit Vogel Alcove began leasing the school building, providing day care and preschool to homeless children.[151]
  • David Crockett School (replaced by Ignacio Zaragoza Elementary in 1990; currently houses special programs[when?]) - Ken Good renovated the school building after purchasing it and was selling it in 2013.[113]
  • Eagle Ford School (closed 1968)
  • James W. Fannin Elementary School - Closed in 2012,[26] due to a decline in the district's budget.[2] After the closure, an adult basic education program was set up there.[113]
  • Frazier Elementary School - Closed in 2012[26] - An animal infestation occurred afterward.[113]
  • Tom W. Field Elementary School - In 2010 DISD investigated Tom W. Field Elementary and discovered that the administration forced teachers to not teach certain subjects, and made false grades to make it appear that the students took the classes.[152] Many of the students originated from a housing complex a distance away, and a school bus transported them to Field. In 2018 the enrollment count was 224. That year DISD designated it as one of six "decision point" schools which could be closed due to a low student population.[20] Field closed in later that year.[135] Ayala stated that the student population could be moved to Joe May Elementary.[20] In October 2019 the district began temporarily using the Field building to house Walnut Hill Elementary School students as their building was destroyed by a tornado.[135]
  • Harlee Elementary School - Closed in 2012[26]
  • Thomas C. Hassell School (closed 1980 and demolished to allow for roadway expansion)
  • Stephen J. Hay School (closed in the late 1970s and has housed several special programs since)
  • Benito Juarez School (closed 1971)
  • John F. Kennedy Learning Center - Circa 2010 the school had 648 students, but the number declined and in 2015 there were 412 students.[2]
  • Mirabeau B. Lamar School (currently houses special programs)
  • Letot School (closed 1968)
  • H. S. Thompson Learning Center/Elementary School (closed 2012) - The school was in South Dallas. As part of reforms encouraged by Judge Sanders, DISD increased the school day length and increased teacher salaries in schools designated as "learning centers" which included Thompson.[111] In 1990 the school had over 900 students, and there were 2,800 residents 0-14 within a 1-mile (1.6 km) radius.[26] From 2000 to 2010 the number of black students at H.S. Thompson Elementary School declined as the housing occupancy levels in its attendance boundary decreased and as the Rhoads Terrace housing projects and other area housing projects were closed and demolished. In 2010 the school had 220 students; half African American and half Hispanic.[153] By 2010 the numbers of students and 0-14 area residents declined to around 200 and 1,110, respectively.[26] In 2013 several DISD administrators suggested to the board that it could reopen H.S. Thompson,[154] but this did not happen. By 2013 the former school was targeted by vandals. In 2013 it was one of the two school properties with the lowest assessed value by the DCAD, at $61,570.[113] A 2016 fire occurred on the second floor of the building.[155]
  • Vickery School (closed 1971)
  • Wheatland School (closed 1964)
  • Phillis Wheatley Elementary School (closed 2012) - The facility is located in the Wheatley Place community in South Dallas.[156] The post-closure facility was vandalized. In 2013 it was one of the two school properties with the lowest assessed value by the DCAD, at $69,720.[113] In 1993 it was nominated as a Dallas historic landmark.[157]
Grades 4–6
  • Daniel 'Chappie' James Learning Center (Dallas) (closed after Spring 2006, students rezoned to Dunbar Elementary, reopened as Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women's Leadership School in 2006.
  • J. Leslie Patton Elementary School (Dallas) (closed after Spring 2006, students rezoned to Oliver (became PreK–5), Russell (4–5), Bryan (PreK–5), Miller (PreK–5))
Pre-K through grade 3
  • Robert C. Buckner Elementary School (Dallas)
  • Fannie C. Harris Elementary School (students moved to Oran Roberts Elementary for Pre-K through 3)
  • Joseph J. McMillan Elementary School (Dallas) (closed after Spring 2006, rezoned to Oliver (became PreK–5), Seguin (PK–3), Bryan (PreK–5), Miller (PreK–5))
Grades K–3
  • T.D. Marshall Elementary School (Dallas) (closed after Spring 2006, most of it was rezoned to Oliver (became PreK–5) and small portions were rezoned to Lisbon (PreK–5), Seguin (PK–3))

References edit

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list, dallas, independent, school, district, schools, this, list, schools, dallas, independent, school, district, more, information, district, main, article, dallas, independent, school, district, contents, high, schools, division, other, schools, middle, scho. This is the list of schools of the Dallas Independent School District For more information on the district see the main article Dallas Independent School District Contents 1 High Schools 1 1 6A 1 2 5A 1 2 1 Division 1 D1 1 2 2 D2 1 3 4A 1 3 1 D1 1 3 2 D2 1 4 3A 1 5 Other 2 K 8 schools 3 Middle schools 4 Elementary schools 5 Preschools 6 Former schools 6 1 Former high schools 6 2 Former middle schools 6 3 Former primary schools 7 ReferencesHigh Schools editThe following are some of the senior high schools located within the district 1 Schools are located in the city of Dallas unless otherwise stated Classifications are based on their classes in football for the 2022 23 alignment by the University Interscholastic League a state entity for academic and athletic competition among public schools For football schools are ranked into one of six classes based on enrollment with 6A representing the largest schools and 1A the smallest 6A edit Skyline High School 1970 5A edit Division 1 D1 edit Moises E Molina High School 1997 W T White High School 1964 Bryan Adams High School 1957 Sunset High School 1925 D2 edit W H Adamson High School 1915 Emmett J Conrad High School 2006 Thomas Jefferson High School 1956 Justin F Kimball High School 1958 W W Samuell High School 1957 Seagoville High School 1928 South Oak Cliff High School 1952 H Grady Spruce High School 1963 Hillcrest High School 1938 Woodrow Wilson High School 1928 4A edit D1 edit David W Carter High School 1966 L G Pinkston High School 1964 North Dallas High School 1922 Wilmer Hutchins High School 1928 D2 edit Lincoln High School 1939 Franklin D Roosevelt High School 1963 3A edit James Madison High School 1956 Other edit Yvonne A Ewell Townview Magnet Center School for the Talented amp Gifted School of Education and Social Services School of Government Law amp Law Enforcement School of Health Professions School of Science and Engineering Kathlyn Joy Gilliam Collegiate Academy Dr Wright L Lassiter Jr Early College High School North Lake Early College High School Irving outside of the DISD boundaries but operated by DISD Barack Obama Male Leadership Academy 6 12 Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women s Leadership School 6 12 New Tech High School at B F Darrell formerly A Maceo Smith New Tech High School Booker T Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts Maya Angelou High SchoolK 8 schools editList of Dallas ISD K 8 schools Name City NotesGeorge Bannerman Dealey Montessori Academy Dallas The school selects students on the basis of academic ability Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer described its acceptance rate as being low like that of Harvard University 2 It is named after George Bannerman Dealey Eduardo Mata Montessori School Dallas The school selects students based on their residence in the district instead of by academics With students in the Mount Auburn Elementary zone having first priority Woodrow Wilson High zone students having second priority and other students after that 2 Neighborhoods with priority for Mata Montessori include Greenland Hills M Streets Junius Heights and Lakewood 3 Mata was a neighborhood elementary school Eduardo Mata Elementary School serving grades 4 through 6 upon its 1997 opening Its initial enrollment was 600 but it declined down to more than 200 students in 2013 since in 2007 6th graders were reassigned to J L Long Middle and Lipscomb Elementary School began taking 4th grade students the following year In 2014 it was converted into a Montessori choice school 2 Rosemont Upper and Lower School Dallas Rosemont School is located in North Oak Cliff It has two parts the Lower Chris V Semos Building for grades pre kindergarten through 2 and the Upper School for grades 3 through 5 It opened in 1922 as Rosemont Elementary School with the current lower school opening in 2005 It gained its middle school in 2012 4 In 2015 of The Dallas Morning News wrote that it had strong academics passionate students and devoted parents and that it is considered a neighborhood gem in North Oak Cliff 5 There are high income White American families in North Oak Cliff who send their children to Rosemont due to the magnet program overall 66 of the students as of 2018 were classified as low income 6 The parents stated that principal Anna Brining had worked to make the school strong in 2015 DISD notified Brining that her contract will not be renewed 5 The Rosemont Early Childhood Parent Teacher Association or RECPTA is focused on fundraising for Rosemont 6 originally known as the Rosemont Preschool Association it as of 2010 was the oldest parent teacher association of an early childhood program as it was first established in 1926 In the local area the nickname for the group is the Mommy Mafia 7 RECPTA holds an auction party each year with about 30 000 netted per session 8 In 2018 the organization had tension between the board which wished to use funds to benefit other schools and the membership which wanted the board to solely focus on Rosemont 6 Solar Preparatory School for Girls at James B Bonham Dallas It is located in East Dallas across from Vickery Place In 2016 the Bonham elementary campus was repurposed as an all girls elementary and middle school devoted to STEAM 9 Harry Stone Montessori School Dallas The school selects students on the basis of academic ability Nicholson described its acceptance rate as being low like that of Harvard University 2 The Medical District BioMedical School Dallas The school Offers a STEM program based on biomedical science amp is located on the ut southwestern campusWalnut Hill International Leadership Academy Dallas Formerly Walnut Hill Elementary SchoolMiddle schools editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2019 List of Dallas ISD middle schools Name City NotesWilliam Hawley Atwell Middle School DallasYoung Women s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs Middle School Balch Springs Young Women s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs Middle School is in Balch Springs 10 11 It as Balch Springs Middle School was scheduled to open in 2012 12 and was originally coeducational It was repurposed in 2016 as a zoned girls school 13 Dallas ISD and Parkland Balch Springs Youth amp Family Health Center is on a site next to the school building 14 on the school property 15 16 It serves disadvantaged children who do not have primary care physicians 14 Previously the center was known as the Spruce Youth and Family Health Center and housed on the grounds of H Grady Spruce High On June 3 2013 it moved to its current location and changed its name 15 T W Browne Middle School DallasE B Comstock Middle School DallasBilly Earl Dade Middle School Dallas Billy Earl Dade Middle School is in the Fair Park area in South Dallas 17 The school merged with Pearl C Anderson Middle School and opened in a new 36 million building in August 2013 In 2015 Nicholson stated that the combination of the two hostile student populations and poor administration from DISD s central office caused it to become for a period Dallas Worst Public School 18 Dallas Environmental Science Academy DESA Dallas As of 2020 update it had about 461 students 19 Prior to 2018 plans were drawn up for a new building but several DISD board members opposed this on the grounds that the neighborhood schools around it needed renovation or replacement and that only focusing on the magnet school would anger local residents 20 Young Men s Leadership Academy at Fred Florence Middle School Dallas Young Men s Leadership Academy at Fred Florence Middle School is in Pleasant Grove It was previously Fred F Florence Middle School a coeducational middle school which had about 850 students in 2016 That year it became a boys zoned school 13 Benjamin Franklin Middle School Dallas The school serves 21 portions of the Preston Hollow area including the Estate area 22 as well as the Janmar area 23 and a portion of Addison 24 It is named after Benjamin Franklin Hector P Garcia Middle School Dallas It was built in 2007 25 W H Gaston Middle School DallasW E Greiner Exploratory Arts Academy DallasRobert H Hill Middle School DallasOliver W Holmes Middle School DallasZan Wesley Holmes Jr Middle School Dallas Zan Wesley Holmes Jr Middle School is located in Oak Cliff 26 and also serves a section of Cockrell Hill 27 28 It was scheduled to open in 2012 12 Its namesake who advocated for area public schools is a pastor 17 D A Hulcy STEAM Middle School Dallas D A Hulcy STEAM Middle School Students are selected on the basis of geographic location It opened in 2015 2 Ignite Middle School DallasKennedy Curry Middle School Dallas Kennedy Curry Middle School is in South Dallas and serves in addition to sections of Dallas Wilmer almost all of Hutchins and a small section of Lancaster 24 29 It opened in fall 1968 as a part of the Wilmer Hutchins Independent School District WHISD 30 It closed in 2005 due to the closure of WHISD Dallas ISD which took over the WHISD schools had renovated Kennedy Curry and expanded it by almost 60 000 square feet 5 600 m2 Funds from the 2008 1 35 billion bond were used to overhaul the Wilmer Hutchins schools In 2011 DISD re opened Kennedy Curry 31 Its namesakes are John F Kennedy and Bishop College president Milton K Curry 32 Harold W Lang Middle School DallasJ L Long Middle School Dallas Neighborhoods within the attendance boundary include 33 Greenland Hills M Streets 34 Junius Heights 35 Lakewood 36 Lower Greenville 37 Munger Place 38 almost all of Swiss Avenue 39 and Vickery Place 40 The school in 2015 was over capacity with its usage at 127 41 In 2011 the school stopped allowing students to carry backpacks due to the fact that it lost security guards as a result of DISD budget cuts 42 Henry W Longfellow Career Exploration Academy DallasThomas C Marsh Middle School Dallas Marsh serves in addition to sections of Dallas portions of Farmers Branch in DISD 43 44 By 2015 a personalized learning program was established there 2 Francisco Pancho Medrano Middle School Dallas The school uses a geothermal cooling system instead of a regular HVAC system It was established as part of a 2008 bond 45 Piedmont G L O B A L Academy Dallas Piedmont G L O B A L Academy formerly John B Hood Middle School In 2012 it had a capacity of about 1 430 students but an enrollment of 1 441 That year it was relieved by the opening of Richards Middle 26 Raul Quintanilla Middle School Dallas The school in addition to sections of Dallas serves sections of Cockrell Hill 27 46 It was named after the Greater Dallas Hispanic Chamber of Commerce chairperson and a NationsBank senior vice president The capacity was 1 200 47 Ann Richards Middle School Dallas Ann Richards Middle School is in Pleasant Grove 26 Scheduled to open in 2012 12 it relieved John B Hood Middle now Piedmont Academy 26 It is named after former Governor of Texas Ann Richards Thomas J Rusk Middle School Dallas Rusk serves in addition to sections of Dallas a portion of Highland Park 48 49 Seagoville Middle School Dallas Seagoville Middle School is in Dallas and serves most of Seagoville and the Dallas County portion of Combine 24 50 Alex W Spence Talented Gifted Academy Dallas Downtown Dallas inside the loop is within the Spence attendance zone 51 52 L V Stockard Middle School Dallas The school in addition to sections of Dallas serves sections of Cockrell Hill 27 53 Boude Storey Middle School DallasSam Tasby Middle School Dallas Sam Tasby Middle School is in Vickery Meadow and it with Jack Lowe Elementary share a single campus and several common areas the two schools have their designated entrances in the school building 54 Tasby opened in August 2006 55 Tasby built with 20 million relieved Franklin Middle School 54 The lot which Tasby and Lowe occupied used to be The Villas at Vickery a retail and residential complex built in 1976 56 Ewell D Walker Middle School Dallas Walker serves 57 portions of the Preston Hollow area 22 and portions of Addison and Carrollton 24 Elementary schools editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2019 John Q Adams Elementary School Nathan Adams Elementary School Birdie Alexander Elementary School Gabe P Allen New Tech Academy William Anderson Elementary School Arcadia Park Elementary School Arlington Park Early Childhood Center Bayles Elementary School Mary McLeod Bethune Elementary School William A Blair Elementary School Annie Webb Blanton Elementary School Felix G Botello Elementary School James Bowie Elementary School Jimmie Tyler Brashear Elementary School John Neely Bryan Elementary School Harrell Budd Elementary School Rufus C Burleson Elementary School David G Burnet Elementary School In 2021 98 of the students are considered economically disadvantaged 58 George H W Bush Elementary School is in Addison The Town of Addison asked Dallas ISD to build Bush with environmentally sensitive materials 59 The PreK 5 school was built as part of a bond approved in May 2008 Bush is adjacent to the Greenhill School and is located along Addison s trail system therefore the school will be accessible by bicycle or on foot from the Les Lacs and Midway Meadows subdivisions Bush has a first floor with 60 000 square feet 5 600 m2 of space and a second floor with 30 000 square feet 2 800 m2 of space 60 Bush has two athletic fields located north of the playgrounds During non school hours Addison residents may use the fields 61 W W Bushman Elementary School F P Caillet Elementary School Adelfa Botello Callejo Elementary School is in Pleasant Grove 62 Scheduled to open in 2012 12 it relieved San Jacinto Elementary School Its surroundings include single and multi family housing and industrial buildings 26 All of the initial employees including principal Sandra Fernandez were reassigned to Callejo from the former Bonham Elementary School as the latter had closed 62 Its namesake who did activism worked as a lawyer 17 John W Carpenter Elementary School C F Carr Elementary School Casa View Elementary School Cedar Crest Elementary School Previously known as Albert Sidney Johnson Elementary School but renamed on July 1 2018 as the former namesake was a general in the Confederate States of America CSA 63 64 Central Elementary School Seagoville Chapel Hill Preparatory School Farmers Branch 43 65 Previously known as William L Cabell Elementary School but renamed on July 1 2018 as the former namesake Mayor of Dallas William Lewis Cabell was a general in the Confederate States of America CSA 63 64 Its current namesake is the community of Chapel Hill 66 Cesar Chavez Learning Center It is in proximity to Downtown Dallas and had a planned initial enrollment of 891 67 Leonides Gonzalez Cigarroa M D Elementary School Nancy J Cochran Elementary School S S Conner Elementary School Leila P Cowart Elementary School Gilbert Cuellar Sr Elementary School Everette L DeGolyer Elementary School Lorenzo De Zavala Elementary School L O Donald Elementary School In addition to serving sections of Dallas it serves a part of Cockrell Hill 27 68 Julius Dorsey Elementary School Frederick Douglass Elementary School Paul Laurence Dunbar Learning Center is in South Dallas near Fair Park In 2016 it had 594 students with 592 of them being classified as being from poor families Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer wrote that staggering unemployment Broken families and parents with criminal records characterize the neighborhood 69 In the 2014 2015 school year Texas education authorities classified it as a failing school As part of a reform effort the district classified Dunbar as a community school in 2016 in which the district would take a holistic approach in recognizing that the surroundings affects the education studentes receive 69 J N Ervin Elementary School Stephen C Foster Elementary School Anne Frank Elementary School in Far North Dallas serves in addition to sections of Dallas portions of Addison 24 70 It opened in August 1997 as the first U S school to be named after Anne Frank The first principal Jonnice Legum Berns was still in that position in 2010 As part of the theme the school has multiple books about Frank and its mascot is the scribe As of 2010 update it had 1 287 students with 68 5 being Hispanic or Latino 24 2 being Black 5 1 being White 2 being Asian and 0 2 being American Indian 86 3 were classified as being from poor families 71 Geneva Heights Elementary School is in Lower Greenville 37 and it also serves Vickery Place 72 73 It was previously known as Robert E Lee Elementary School but renamed on July 1 2018 as the former namesake was a general in the Confederacy 63 64 Circa 2007 the school was known for high staff retention periods to the point where a teacher who had been at the school for fewer than ten years was considered to be a newcomer At one time enrollment was 250 but it later got a peak enrollment of almost 600 Enrollment declined by 2007 partly because some apartment complexes housing children were razed In addition Park Lane Elementary opened serving areas previously zoned to Lee By 2007 the enrollment was about 250 30 from outside of the school s attendance zone with enrollment being about 45 of the building s capacity and with only the ground floor in use There were 18 students per teacher 74 Keri Mitchell of The Advocate Lakewood East Dallas wrote that a 2007 campaign to attract more neighborhood families fizzled 75 In 2012 the enrollment was 58 of the building s capacity It was scheduled to absorb the population of the former Bonham Elementary School later that year 26 Mitchell wrote that the absorption of Bonham students added engaged families to the school community 75 In addition during the principalship of Ali Saiyed the school added a dual language program 75 In 2014 Lee had 362 students with 71 being classified as low income and with about 83 being racial and ethnic minorities At that time few parents from the single family houses in the area sent their children to the school DISD planned to introduce the International Baccalaureate IB program to attract families to the school 76 In 2014 Mitchell described the new principal Bridget Ransom as being energetic and a factor that could make the school more popular 75 2015 Nicholson wrote that the IB program made the school more popular in the community 2 The district planned to retain the original building from 1931 77 and by 2023 the other buildings were razed so new construction could take its place The ex Jill Stone Elementary building served as a temporary campus 78 Tom C Gooch Elementary School is in Dallas It serves in addition to sections of Dallas portions of Farmers Branch in DISD 43 79 Charles A Gill Elementary School Henry B Gonzalez Personalized Learning Academy Tom C Gooch Elementary School Frank Guzick Elementary School Lenore Kirk Hall Elementary School Ebby Halliday Elementary School It opened in 2011 and was named for a businessperson and real estate agent 17 N W Harllee Early Childhood Center Nathaniel Hawthorne Elementary School Margaret B Henderson Elementary School Montessori Academy at Onesimo Hernandez Victor H Hexter Elementary School Highland Meadows Elementary School James S Hogg Elementary School is in the north part of Oak Cliff In 2015 the school had 280 students with 50 of them natively speaking Spanish and with over 90 of the total being Hispanic and or Latino In 2016 it established a two way English Spanish bilingual education program partly due to the Hispanic and Latino presence at the school 80 In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six decision point schools which could be closed in the future due to a low student population 20 H I Holland Elementary School at Lisbon Lida Hooe Elementary School L L Hotchkiss Elementary School In 1991 Dallas ISD officials proposed that Hotchkiss Elementary School reopen as a neighborhood school during the 1992 1993 school year The Montessori program previously at Hotchkiss would be moved to Dealey Elementary School The proposed attendance zone for Hotchkiss was a triangular area bounded by Fair Oaks Avenue Northwest Highway and White Rock Creek 81 The proposed Hotchkiss neighborhood would relieve Kramer Pershing Preston Hollow and Dan D Rogers schools 82 In 1992 federal judge Barefoot Sanders blocked the reopening of Hotchkiss 83 so school board members filed an appeal with the 5th U S Circuit Court of Appeals 84 In 1994 Hotchkiss re opened as a neighborhood school The school expected to receive 875 students it actually received almost 925 The school had to use 17 portable classrooms and two classrooms had to be converted into food storage rooms Judy Zimny the principal of Hotchkiss said that most of the students came from the apartments in the Abrams Road Northwest Highway and Skillman Road area The school was 42 black 38 Hispanic and 20 White The school is located within what was then a mostly White residential neighborhood but in 1994 most of the White students to Hotchkiss were bussed in from other locations About 100 students from other areas were voluntarily enrolled in Hotchkiss so Hotchkiss s racial demographics were more balanced 85 Sam Houston Elementary School a k a Personalized Learning Preparatory at Sam Houston is in Oak Lawn Dallas The current Sam Houston Elementary campus was scheduled to open in the northern hemisphere fall of 1999 86 In 2014 2015 its student body was 95 low income despite that it exceeded its performance targets Due to gentrification Sam Houston s enrollment declined to 201 students in the 2015 2016 school year while it had 302 students in the 2011 2012 school year 2 John Ireland Elementary School Eddie Bernice Johnson Elementary School Wilmer Opened in 2020 87 Anson Jones Elementary School In addition to serving sections of Dallas it serves a part of Cockrell Hill 27 88 Barbara Jordan Elementary School Jerry R Junkins Elementary School is in Carrollton Named after a former CEO of Texas Instruments it opened on August 14 2006 89 Louise Wolff Kahn Elementary School is in west Oak Cliff South Dallas and a businessperson is its namesake 90 Edwin J Kiest Elementary School Martin Luther King Jr Learning Center Kleberg Elementary School Obadiah Knight Elementary School Arthur Kramer Elementary School is in North Dallas It serves the Janmar area 23 91 In 1989 the DISD board proposed the re opening of Arthur Kramer Elementary School Under the plan portions of the attendance boundaries of Pershing Preston Hollow and Rogers would have been modified 92 In 1991 the Kramer Pershing and Preston Hollow schools had a combined total of 32 portable buildings to house excess students Parents from those schools supported plans to re open Hotchkiss Elementary School as a neighborhood school so it could house excess students 93 Richard Lagow Elementary School Lakewood Elementary School is in Lakewood Dallas first established in 1951 Its original building could house around 500 550 students Circa 1984 the school first started installing temporary buildings to accommodate an increased enrollment 94 In 2012 Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer stated that Lakewood Elementary had superb academics citing its regular appearance as an exemplary ranked school by the Texas Education Agency and how its test scores were far superior to DISD and state averages 95 In 2014 the school had 853 students with 17 classified as being low income 76 were non Hispanic white 76 As of 2016 update 96 of the student body was not low income making it the only DISD school with 80 or more non low income students and it was also the school with the highest percentage of Anglo White students in the school district 96 In 2015 Nicholson wrote that Lakewood elementary parents are perennially opposed to changing the school s attendance zone and that they are fiercely protective of their successful but carefully gerrymandered neighborhood institution 2 In 2014 other DISD board members opposed a proposal from fellow board member Bernadette Nuttall to rezone some houses zoned to Lakewood to Mata and Mount Auburn schools 97 Due to overcrowding by 2014 the Lakewood Elementary Expansion Fund LEEF generated 500 000 to fund an architectural plan for an expansion 98 and DISD proposed a Bridge Plan to allow for the expansion of the school 99 In 2013 parents began a campaign to raise 15 million for expanding Lakewood wanting to replace its older facility and the portable buildings that housed over half of Lakewood Elementary s students 95 Sidney Lanier Expressive Arts Vanguard Umphrey Lee Elementary School William Lipscomb Elementary School is in Junius Heights 100 In addition to that neighborhood it also serves Munger Place and Swiss Avenue By 2008 DISD made the school only serve grades Pre Kindergarten through 3 with grades 4 and 5 from the Lipscomb zone assigned to Mata Elementary By that year parents campaigned for the return of grades 4 and 5 to Lipscomb 101 In 2008 Lipscomb began serving the 4th grade 2 As of 2019 update Lipscomb now serves all elementary grades Jack Lowe Sr Elementary School is in Vickery Meadow and shares a single campus and several common areas with Tasby Middle the two schools have their designated entrances in the school building 54 Lowe has 89 000 square feet 8 300 m2 of space with 34 classrooms 102 In August 2006 Lowe Elementary built with 12 million opened with kindergarten fifth grade relieving Hexter L L Hotchkiss Kramer Robert E Lee Preston Hollow and Dan D Rogers elementary schools 102 56 B H Macon Elementary School Maple Lawn Elementary School is in Dallas Maple Lawn serves in addition to sections of Dallas a portion of Highland Park 48 103 As of 2020 update the school had fewer than 500 students Maple Lawn was in a period one of 19 not named after a person while the district had 230 schools at this point The school initially in the Maple Lawn Independent School District was formed in the 1900s by a consolidation of the Cochran Chapel school and the Maple Avenue School The name was given by a child who suggested the name as part of a contest in exchange for 1 A two storey brick building was constructed on donated land with 10 000 raised by a bond DISD annexed MLISD in 1922 104 Herbert Marcus Elementary School Thomas L Marsalis Elementary School Eladio R Martinez Learning Center Jose Joe May Elementary School Near Lake Bachman and opened in 2012 it is named after an ex DISD board member 17 Ronald Erwin McNair Elementary School Lee A McShan Jr Elementary School is in Vickery Meadow McShan located on an 8 2 acre 33 000 m2 site includes 89 666 square feet 8 330 2 m2 of space with 33 core classrooms three special education classrooms dedicated classrooms for art science and technology classes a 400 seat auditorium and a gymnasium In 2005 McShan built with 12 million as part of a 2002 bond program 105 opened with 737 students 55 from pre Kindergarten sixth grade the sixth grade would be transferred to the middle school the following year 105 Esperanza Hope Medrano Elementary School Ben Milam Elementary School In 2018 Eva Marie Ayala of Dallas Morning News identified it as the elementary school which covers most of Downtown Dallas 20 As of 2020 update it serves almost all of Downtown Dallas 106 It opened in 1912 as the Fairland School 107 By 2015 gentrification was occurring in the area which had the possibility of causing enrollment figures to decline 2 In 2018 many of the fewer than 300 students did not originate from its attendance zone Ayala wrote that Milam has limited space to grow much more if a new specialized program was offered there 20 In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six decision point schools which could be closed due to a low student population 20 William Brown Miller Elementary School Mockingbird Elementary School is located in Lower Greenville 37 and also serves Greenland Hills the M Streets 108 and is in proximity to it 3 Its campus has a capacity of about 400 students 97 It was Previously known as Stonewall Jackson Elementary School but renamed on July 1 2018 as the former namesake was a general in the Confederacy 63 64 Mockingbird houses Dallas ISD s deaf program for elementary school In previous periods it had about 100 districtwide deaf students and 100 zoned families but by 2007 the school s popularity among neighborhood parents increased 74 The school as of 2005 gives American Sign Language instruction to all students In addition most employees including the principal and all teachers also had knowledge of ASL Principles and Methods of Adapted Physical Education and Recreation 2005 edition states that the unique and exceptional efforts in educating all children enrolled resulted in the school receiving the Blue Ribbon Award in 1999 109 Maria Moreno Elementary School Nancy Moseley Elementary School Mount Auburn Elementary School a k a Mount Auburn STEAM Academy In 2015 almost all of the students were Hispanic and Latino and most were economically disadvantaged 2 Clara Oliver Elementary School George Peabody Elementary School Elisha M Pease Elementary School John F Peeler Elementary School In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six decision point schools which could be closed in the future due to a low student population 20 John J Pershing Elementary School is in North Dallas within Preston Hollow and serving a part of Old Preston Hollow 22 110 Pleasant Grove Elementary School K B Polk Center for Academically Talented and Gifted Preston Hollow Elementary School John H Reagan Elementary School Martha Turner Reilly Elementary School Reinhardt Elementary School Joseph J Rhoads Learning Center Charles Rice Learning Center located in the Queen City area of South Dallas is in a red brick two story building As part of reforms encouraged by U S District Judge Barefoot Sanders DISD increased the school day length and increased teacher salaries in schools designated as learning centers which included Rice 111 In 2015 Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer stated that Rice is generally regarded by parents as the best elementary school in South Dallas 18 According to Nicholson regard Charles Rice as a local gem but its reputation for quality doesn t extend much further than that partly due to the school s high level of student poverty and partly due to the poor reputation of South Dallas 112 The school which as of 2015 had 98 of its students designated as having free or reduced lunch a marker of being poor had the highest 2013 2015 School Effectiveness Index SEI an internal DISD school index that determines how well a school is performing relative to its community demographics 112 Nicholson wrote in March 2016 that the SEI ranking perennially puts Charles Rice neck and neck with Lakewood Elementary in the Lakewood neighborhood in East Dallas as the district s best non magnet school even though Rice s raw test scores while above the DISD average were far below Lakewood s 111 As of 2015 update Rice had earned three of five distinctions from the Texas Education Agency TEA 112 While many low income schools have a lot of teacher turnover Rice as of 2016 has an average teacher tenure of 23 3 years 111 Thelma Elizabeth Page Richardson Elementary School is located in Pleasant Grove Named after a teacher it opened in 2013 17 Oran M Roberts Elementary School is located in the Fair Park area 17 The previous campus closed in 2012 with a new campus opening in August 2013 26 The former school building was demolished 113 Dan D Rogers Elementary School Edna Rowe Elementary School John W Runyon Elementary School Clinton P Russell Elementary School Arturo Salazar Elementary School Julian T Saldivar Elementary School San Jacinto Elementary School is in Pleasant Grove 114 In 2012 it had an official capacity of 551 but it had 690 enrolled students Callejo Elementary opened in 2012 to relieve it 26 REAL School Gardens a Fort Worth company installed a school garden circa 2015 114 Alex Sanger Preparatory School formerly Alex Sanger Elementary School is in Forest Hills 115 In 2013 the majority of the students came from English as a second language and working class backgrounds That year the assistant city manager of Dallas had her child at Sanger but later withdrew the child and Rudy Bush of The Dallas Morning News wrote an op ed explaining her reasoning for doing so According to Joe Tone of the Dallas Observer there were multiple parents at Sanger who felt the op ed was unfair 116 Tim Rogers of D Magazine also criticized the Bush story 117 According to Rogers the article did grievous damage to DISD and to Sanger 115 School for the Talented and Gifted in Pleasant Grove Seagoville Elementary School is in Seagoville and also serves the Dallas County portion of Combine 24 118 Seagoville North Elementary School is in Seagoville It was scheduled to open in 2012 12 due to an increasing population in Seagoville 26 Ascher Silberstein Elementary School Larry G Smith Elementary School Solar Preparatory School for Boys Solar Preparatory School for Girls Celestino Mauricio Soto Jr Elementary School In addition to serving sections of Dallas it serves a part of Cockrell Hill 27 119 J P Starks Elementary School also J P Starks Math Science and Technology Vanguard is in East Oak Cliff 111 Leslie A Stemmons Elementary School Stevens Park Elementary School Jill Stone Elementary School at Vickery Meadow is in Vickery Midtown formerly Vickery Meadow Stone Elementary includes two main buildings with one including the administrative offices the media center and several classrooms and the other including common areas and public function facilities and modular classroom buildings with individual telephone and toilet facilities 120 The two story main Stone building has outdoor stairwells and faces an inner courtyard Jayne Noble Suhler of The Dallas Morning News said i n a neighborhood of apartments Stone Elementary fits right in 86 Vickery Meadows Elementary School opened as the first school in Vickery Meadow 120 in 2005 it was renamed Jill Stone Elementary School at Vickery Meadow 121 When it opened Vickery Meadows Elementary took in 400 students Previously students who were bussed to other campuses in the Dallas area were now able to walk to their zoned schools As of 1998 all students at Vickery Meadows Elementary were immersed in completely English classes for eight weeks before being placed in bilingual or ESL classes The district anticipated that the school would be 75 Hispanic 86 C A Tatum Jr Elementary School T G Terry Elementary School Robert L Thornton Elementary School Edward Titche Elementary School is in Pleasant Grove In 2015 it was over capacity with forty portable buildings to house excess students During that year a bond proposal included a new campus for Titche 97 Thomas Tolbert Elementary School Trinity Heights Talented and Gifted George W Truett Elementary School Adelle Turner Elementary School Mark Twain School for the Talented and Gifted In 2018 DISD designated it as one of six decision point schools which could be closed in the future due to a low student population 20 Urban Park Elementary School A replacement campus began construction in 2024 122 Daniel Webster Elementary School Martin Weiss Elementary School Sudie L Williams Talented and Gifted Academy Wilmer Hutchins Elementary School is located in South Dallas and serves in addition to sections of Dallas almost all of Hutchins and a small section of Lancaster 24 123 Previously it also included a portion of Wilmer 24 124 The school opened in 2011 to serve areas of the former Wilmer Hutchins Independent School District 31 Winnetka Elementary School Harry C Withers Elementary School is in North Dallas and serves a section of Preston Hollow 22 125 It has a Spanish English dual language programthat as of 2013 this program has a waiting list the school has a lottery system to determine which out of boundary students may attend In 1982 the school only had 80 students so the district closed it but after the area school aged population increased DISD opened the school again in 1990 126 Whitney M Young Jr Elementary School Ignacio Zaragoza Elementary School A few buildings in Downtown Dallas are in the school s attendance boundary 127 Preschools editWilmer Early Childhood Center Wilmer It occupies the former Wilmer Hutchins ISD Wilmer Elementary School 128 129 It opened in 2015 130 Former schools editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources List of Dallas Independent School District schools news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Former high schools edit Norman Robert Crozier Technical High School the school was known by many names Dallas High School 1907 1916 Main High School 1916 1917 Bryan Street High School 1917 1928 Dallas Technical High School 1928 1942 Crozier Technical High School 1942 1971 school closed in June 1971 next year most went to Skyline HS 7777 Forney road Some students that came from Crozier Tech negotiated with DISD to show the diplomas as N R Crozier Technical High School up to the year 1975 Business and Management Magnet Center 1975 May 1995 School relocated to Townview Center May 1995 Pleasant Grove High School 1953 1957 the school had been in existence since 1939 but was in Pleasant Grove ISD until that district was absorbed into Dallas ISD in 1953 Today the campus is used by John Quincy Adams Elementary School Forest Avenue High School 1916 1956 was converted from a whites only school to an African American school and renamed James Madison High School and the white students were sent to Crozier Tech 131 Rylie High School 1956 1963 converted to a junior high and replaced with H Grady Spruce High School A Maceo Smith High School E D Walker High School for pupils with disabilities Later instead housed an elementary school program for advanced students 132 A Health Special Alternative High School for pregnant students was Constructed named Maya Angelou School 133 Former middle schools edit Pearl C Anderson Middle School closed 2013 The school was in South Dallas 26 Shortly after the closure the school was targeted by thieves and vandals In 2013 the Dallas County Appraisal District DCAD appraised the property s value as 208 100 113 Edward H Cary Middle School was in North Dallas and serves a section of the Preston Hollow area including Old Preston Hollow or the Estate area 22 134 In 2019 the school had 500 students In 2019 a strike from a tornado destroyed the school building In the period until a new campus building is established Franklin Middle School was scheduled to take about 60 of the students while the remainder were to go to Medrano Middle School 135 It was disestablished in 2020 136 S S Conner Junior High School 1955 1964 the S S Conner name was subsequently taken by an elementary school that opened in 1965 Edison Middle Learning Center closed 2018 137 It was located in West Dallas and named after Thomas Edison In 2018 it had scores in Texas state tests considered unacceptable by the Texas Education Agency TEA for five consecutive years in a row In 2018 the number of students was below half of the building s capacity 138 in 2015 the utilization the smallest in the district s traditional schools was 32 Hobbs and Hacker stated that Not many families choose to send their children to the habitually low performing school 97 Every single student was classified as low income in the 2013 2014 school year and by 2018 the percentage of such was 90 The region of Dallas in which it was located was majority Hispanophone The physical plant of the building was also deteriorating at that time Bill Zeeble of described the last principal Earl Gilmore as the last chance principal 138 In an attempt to keep the school open DISD made Edison a Accelerating Campus Excellence ACE school 138 However the district ultimately had the school closed in 2018 if DISD had not closed Edison that year the State of Texas would have had the right to take action against Edison As a result L G Pinkston High School expanded to grades 7 12 and absorbed the students 137 In 2019 Edison began housing students from Jefferson High as the school s building sustained damage from a 2019 tornado 135 D A Hulcy Middle School In the Red Bird community 113 it closed in 2012 26 due to a decline in the district s budget 2 For a period DISD used it as a police training academy In 2013 the DCAD appraised the value of the property at 11 1 million 113 It became D A Hulcy STEAM Middle School in 2015 2 Maynard Jackson Middle School closed 2011 Prior to summer 2011 the community often complained about poor conditions at the school DISD rezoned the students to Kennedy Curry Middle School in southern Dallas 31 dead link Rylie Junior High School 1963 1978 converted from the former Rylie High School later closed and became a charter school citation needed in the 1980s Sequoyah Junior High School 1958 1969 replaced by Thomas Edison Junior High School Sequoyah was converted to an elementary campus Former primary schools edit Addison School closed 1966 Alamo School closed 1968 Arlington Park Elementary School Closed in 2012 26 Stephen F Austin School opened in 1886 as East Dallas School renamed Stephen F Austin School in 1902 served as an elementary school until 1976 when the building was taken over by the High School for the Health Professions the structure was razed around the year 2000 139 140 141 James B Bonham Elementary School Closed in 2012 It served most of Vickery Place 73 142 Bonham opened in 1923 as the Vickery Place School Designed by C D Hill the building s price was about 121 000 The school received its current name in December 1939 The Vickery Meadow Association wrote We believe this was done to avoid confusion with the town of Vickery which was annexed into DISD soon afterwards 143 Bonham Elementary won the National Excellence in Urban Education Award in 2009 and the Blue Ribbon School Award in 2010 and the Texas Education Agency TEA ranked the campus as exemplary for several years The school had above 200 students in the 2011 2012 school year leading Eric Nicholson of the Dallas Observer to write that the school was badly underused 2 There were 22 students per teacher at that time which was lower than the common ration of 27 to 1 144 and underpopulation was one reason stated to close the school The student population sharply declined as neighborhood gentrification occurred and the inflation adjusted median income increased by 80 from 1990 to 2010 Fewer school age children lived in the area with 580 residents 18 or younger in 2010 compared to 1 187 in 1990 The husband of the president of the Bonham parent teacher association Dave Walkington stated that the district may have additionally selected Bonham as a way of telling the Texas Legislature that it needed additional funds and that high performing schools were in jeopardy Additionally articles from local publications stated that DISD would have reductions in federal funding if it closed campuses with poor academic performance 2 DISD board members stated that deciding to close a small school regardless of its academic performance would be a fair decision 145 Students were rezoned to Robert E Lee Elementary School since renamed Geneva Heights Elementary School 26 146 All of the final teaching employees including principal Sandra Fernandez were reassigned to Callejo Elementary which had opened that year 62 The physical building post closure had sustained some vandalism After the closure DISD immigration intake facility opened on the Bonham school grounds but not in the main building In 2013 the DCAD appraised the property s value as 6 7 million 113 The Bonham campus became a female only STEAM school in 2016 9 City Park Elementary School Closed in 2012 26 City Park Elementary School in Cedars named for its location across Old City Park first opened in 1919 147 and served the community until it closed 148 149 As of 2013 it is used as an after school program s classroom location 150 In 2014 the nonprofit Vogel Alcove began leasing the school building providing day care and preschool to homeless children 151 David Crockett School replaced by Ignacio Zaragoza Elementary in 1990 currently houses special programs when Ken Good renovated the school building after purchasing it and was selling it in 2013 113 Eagle Ford School closed 1968 James W Fannin Elementary School Closed in 2012 26 due to a decline in the district s budget 2 After the closure an adult basic education program was set up there 113 Frazier Elementary School Closed in 2012 26 An animal infestation occurred afterward 113 Tom W Field Elementary School In 2010 DISD investigated Tom W Field Elementary and discovered that the administration forced teachers to not teach certain subjects and made false grades to make it appear that the students took the classes 152 Many of the students originated from a housing complex a distance away and a school bus transported them to Field In 2018 the enrollment count was 224 That year DISD designated it as one of six decision point schools which could be closed due to a low student population 20 Field closed in later that year 135 Ayala stated that the student population could be moved to Joe May Elementary 20 In October 2019 the district began temporarily using the Field building to house Walnut Hill Elementary School students as their building was destroyed by a tornado 135 Harlee Elementary School Closed in 2012 26 Thomas C Hassell School closed 1980 and demolished to allow for roadway expansion Stephen J Hay School closed in the late 1970s and has housed several special programs since Benito Juarez School closed 1971 John F Kennedy Learning Center Circa 2010 the school had 648 students but the number declined and in 2015 there were 412 students 2 Mirabeau B Lamar School currently houses special programs Letot School closed 1968 H S Thompson Learning Center Elementary School closed 2012 The school was in South Dallas As part of reforms encouraged by Judge Sanders DISD increased the school day length and increased teacher salaries in schools designated as learning centers which included Thompson 111 In 1990 the school had over 900 students and there were 2 800 residents 0 14 within a 1 mile 1 6 km radius 26 From 2000 to 2010 the number of black students at H S Thompson Elementary School declined as the housing occupancy levels in its attendance boundary decreased and as the Rhoads Terrace housing projects and other area housing projects were closed and demolished In 2010 the school had 220 students half African American and half Hispanic 153 By 2010 the numbers of students and 0 14 area residents declined to around 200 and 1 110 respectively 26 In 2013 several DISD administrators suggested to the board that it could reopen H S Thompson 154 but this did not happen By 2013 the former school was targeted by vandals In 2013 it was one of the two school properties with the lowest assessed value by the DCAD at 61 570 113 A 2016 fire occurred on the second floor of the building 155 Vickery School closed 1971 Wheatland School closed 1964 Phillis Wheatley Elementary School closed 2012 The facility is located in the Wheatley Place community in South Dallas 156 The post closure facility was vandalized In 2013 it was one of the two school properties with the lowest assessed value by the DCAD at 69 720 113 In 1993 it was nominated as a Dallas historic landmark 157 Grades 4 6Daniel Chappie James Learning Center Dallas closed after Spring 2006 students rezoned to Dunbar Elementary reopened as Irma Lerma Rangel Young Women s Leadership School in 2006 J Leslie Patton Elementary School Dallas closed after Spring 2006 students rezoned to Oliver became PreK 5 Russell 4 5 Bryan PreK 5 Miller PreK 5 Pre K through grade 3Robert C Buckner Elementary School Dallas Fannie C Harris Elementary School students moved to Oran Roberts Elementary for Pre K through 3 Joseph J McMillan Elementary School Dallas closed after Spring 2006 rezoned to Oliver became PreK 5 Seguin PK 3 Bryan PreK 5 Miller PreK 5 Grades K 3T D Marshall Elementary School Dallas closed after Spring 2006 most of it was rezoned to Oliver became PreK 5 and small portions were rezoned to Lisbon PreK 5 Seguin PK 3 References edit Dallas ISD High School Listing dallasisd org Retrieved March 10 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Nicholson Eric November 2 2015 Will Gentrification Destroy Dallas Public Schools or Will It Save Them Dallas Observer Retrieved October 21 2019 a b Dallas ISD could open pre K centers create a Montessori school The Dallas Morning News February 13 2014 Retrieved November 9 2019 The source states while Stonewall Jackson Elementary in the M Streets is at 156 percent even though it is in Lower Greenville Our School Rosemont School Retrieved April 6 2020 a b Haag Matthew Popular Dallas ISD principal at Rosemont Elementary to lose her job Archived 2015 04 16 at the Wayback Machine The Dallas Morning News Retrieved on April 17 2015 a b c Smith Corbett May 23 2018 After PTA votes against sharing funds with other schools Oak Cliff community raises 34 000 to do it anyway The Dallas Morning News Retrieved April 7 2020 Stone Rachel April 1 2020 Mommy Mafia Oak Cliff Advocate Retrieved April 7 2020 Mitchell Keri April 26 2018 Why Oak Cliff s mommy mafia is at war Advocate Oak Cliff a b Fernandez Demond Dallas ISD to open first all girls S T E A M school Archive WFAA September 28 2015 Retrieved on September 30 2015 Home Young Women s STEAM Academy at Balch Springs Middle School Retrieved October 21 2019 710 Cheyenne Road Dallas TX 75217 Zoning Map PDF City of Balch Springs Retrieved October 21 2019 linked from the GIS map index a b c d e Haag Matthew February 5 2012 Meet the five new Dallas ISD schools to open later this year The Dallas Morning News Retrieved October 20 2019 a b Ragland James August 17 2016 Will same sex schools make Dallas ISD more attractive Won t hurt to try The Dallas Morning News Retrieved October 21 2019 a b Jacobson Sherry May 2 2013 Balch Springs to get new Parkland youth and family health center The Dallas Morning News Retrieved October 21 2019 a b Cummings Tommy May 28 2013 Health center will move to Balch Springs Middle School campus The Dallas Morning News Retrieved October 21 2019 The school and the center have the same address Balch Springs Youth amp Family Center Dallas Independent School District Retrieved October 21 2019 Balch Springs Youth amp Family Center is located at Young Women s STEAM Academy Balch Springs 710 Cheyenne Road Dallas TX 75217 Instances of 701 Cheyenne seem to be errors a b c d e f g New Schools 2008 Bond Program Dallas Independent School District Retrieved on January 8 2010 a b Nicholson Eric Taming Dade The Fall and Rise of Dallas Worst Public School Dallas Observer Wednesday September 30 2015 Retrieved on June 24 2016 Quick Facts Dallas Environmental Science Academy Retrieved April 7 2020 a b c d e f g h i Ayala Eva Marie November 1 2018 Mass closures off the table but Dallas still has tough choices to make for some schools The Dallas Morning News Retrieved April 7 2020 2019 20 Benjamin Franklin Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 a b c d e Jacobs Mary January 7 2009 Preston Hollow adding Bushes to list of high profile residents The Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on June 21 2016 Retrieved October 12 2011 Today real estate agents count Midway and Northwest Highway Compare the boundaries stated in the text to the Dallas ISD attendance zone maps a b Neighborhood Spotlight Jan Mar D Magazine July 2 2009 Archived from the original on August 25 2009 Retrieved October 12 2011 Location South of Forest Lane excluding El Hara Circle west of The White Rock Creek easement north of Mason Dells amp Baxtershire drives east of Hillcrest Avenue compare this against the Dallas ISD boundary maps a b c d e f g h 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Dallas County TX PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved December 20 2023 SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP 2010 CENSUS Dallas County TX PDF 2010 U S Census U S Census Bureau Retrieved November 5 2019 Hector P Garcia Middle School Glenn Partners Retrieved April 7 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Dallas ISD s plans to close 11 schools as it s building new ones raise questions The Dallas Morning News February 5 2012 Retrieved October 20 2019 a b c d e f 2010 CENSUS CENSUS BLOCK MAP Cockrell Hill city TX PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Zan Wesley Holmes Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Kennedy Curry Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 15 2019 Campus History Kennedy Curry Middle School June 30 2003 Retrieved on September 3 2011 a b c Hobbs Tawnell D Dallas school district to open 3 Wilmer Hutchins campuses close 2 others The Dallas Morning News November 24 2010 Retrieved on July 15 2011 History Kennedy Curry Middle School Wilmer Hutchins Independent School District June 17 2002 Archived from the original on June 17 2002 Retrieved November 8 2019 2019 20 J L Long Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved October 21 2019 Location amp Map Greenland Hills Neighborhood Association Retrieved October 21 2019 PDF map Compare this map to the school attendance boundaries Junius Heights Historic District Map Junius Heights Historic District Retrieved November 9 2019 PDF includes map of the district which indicates the locations of Lipscomb the library and Woodrow Wilson and Junius Heights Historic District City of Dallas Retrieved November 9 2019 includes map of the district Schools Lakewood Neighborhood Association Retrieved October 21 2019 Map Compare the map to DISD boundaries a b c Boundaries Lower Greenville Neighborhood Association February 2 2011 Retrieved October 21 2019 The schools are indicated under their former names Jackson Mockingbird and Lee Geneva Heights Munger Place Historic District Dallas City Hall Retrieved November 9 2019 Swiss Avenue Historic District Dallas City Hall Retrieved November 9 2019 About Us Vickery Place Accessed October 8 2008 Compare this map to the DISD school attendance zone maps Dallas ISD bond opponents say adjusting attendance zones could ease overcrowding The Dallas Morning News October 27 2015 Retrieved March 4 2020 Haag Matthew August 22 2011 JL Long Middle School students both nervous and excited for first day The Dallas Morning News Retrieved March 4 2020 a b c Zoning Map Archived 2014 04 30 at the Wayback Machine City of Farmers Branch Updated March 2013 Retrieved on July 14 2016 The zoning map shows which areas are zoned for residential use and only residential zoned areas are considered in regards to which school zones serve the city 2019 20 Thomas C Marsh Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 15 2019 Jimenez Jesus August 22 2019 Inside it gets bad Dallas ISD campus with broken AC more like a middle school sauna Dallas Morning News Retrieved April 7 2020 2019 20 Raul Quintanilla Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 Raul Quintanilla Middle School Dallas Independent School District February 22 1998 Archived from the original on February 22 1998 Retrieved November 16 2019 a b Map Highland Park Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Thomas J Rusk Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Seagoville Middle School Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 15 2019 https www dart org 443 maps pdfmaps downtowndallasmap18aug14 pdf bare URL PDF Spence Alex W Attendance Zone PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved April 7 2020 2019 20 L V Stockard Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 a b c Sam Tasby Middle School Brochure Dallas Independent School District Accessed October 11 2008 a b Young Michael E Hope blooms in Vickery Meadow Archive The Dallas Morning News Saturday January 7 2006 a b Whitley Glenna Tossed Out Dallas Observer May 13 2004 1 Retrieved on September 6 2011 at The Villas at Vickery were given abrupt notice that they must move their businesses within 30 days Exercising its power of eminent domain DISD has purchased the 19 acre property for 14 3 million to build a much needed school to relieve overcrowding at Hotchkiss Hexter Rogers and Kramer elementary schools The description matches the schools Jack Lowe Elementary occupied and Lowe and Tasby share a campus 2019 20 Ewell D Walker Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 Page Sydney October 14 2020 Eric Hale is the first Black man named Texas Teacher of the Year I m not the first to deserve it Washington Post Retrieved May 1 2021 Dallas I S D s George Herbert Walker Bush Elementary School to be built in Addison Archived 2010 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Town of Addison Retrieved on January 8 2010 Status Report 1 July 23 2009 George Herbert Walker Bush Elementary School Archived December 24 2010 at the Wayback Machine Town of Addison July 23 2009 Retrieved on January 8 2010 GEORGE H W BUSH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Archived 2011 07 17 at the Wayback Machine Town of Addison Retrieved on July 15 2011 a b c Stone Rachel April 24 2012 Bonham faculty staff students and parents prepare to say goodbye Advocate Lakewood East Dallas Retrieved October 21 2019 a b c d Zoga Diana December 14 2017 Dallas School Board Approves New Names for Three Schools Currently Named After Confederate Generals KXAS TV NBC DFW Retrieved March 11 2019 a b c d Smith Corbett June 13 2018 See ya Stonewall Dallas ISD begins to remove Confederate leaders names from 4 schools The Dallas Morning News Retrieved March 11 2019 via DallasNews com Home Chapel Hill Preparatory School Retrieved November 16 2019 12701 Templeton Trail Dallas TX 75234 The mailing address city name states Dallas but the school is physically in the Farmers Branch city limits Please compare with the map Smith Corbett December 16 2017 Schools honoring Confederate generals get new names as Dallas ISD pledges to strive for equity The Dallas Morning News Retrieved December 17 2017 William L Cabell Elementary will become Chapel Hill Preparatory named after the surrounding community in Farmers Branch Cesar Chavez Learning Center Dallas Independent School District October 24 1997 Archived from the original on October 24 1997 Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 L O Donald Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 a b Nicholson Eric August 2 2016 Can Game Changing Community Schools Model Survive Dallas ISD Politics Dallas Observer Retrieved October 13 2019 2019 20 Anne Frank Elementary School Attendance Zone PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 Dallas Anne Frank Elementary connects with the past The Dallas Morning News March 28 2010 Retrieved October 11 2019 2019 20 Geneva Heights Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved October 21 2019 a b About Us Archived from the original on June 22 2003 Retrieved October 8 2008 a b School profile Robert E Lee Elementary Advocate Lakewood East Dallas May 1 2007 Retrieved October 21 2019 a b c d Has Robert E Lee Elementary reached a tipping point The Advocate Lakewood East Dallas November 14 2014 Retrieved October 21 2019 a b Nicholson Eric November 12 2014 How Dallas ISD Is Working to Attract Middle Class Families to Another East Dallas School Dallas Observer Retrieved October 21 2019 Umsted Renee February 10 2022 Neighbors applaud new Geneva Heights design but worry about safety at temporary campus Advocate Magazine Retrieved December 19 2023 Umsted Renee February 14 2023 Photos Demolition at Geneva Heights Elementary Advocate Magazine Retrieved December 19 2023 2019 20 Tom C Gooch Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 15 2019 Azpurua Ana E August 23 2016 Dallas schools double up in expanding dual language program The Dallas Morning News Al Dia Retrieved October 22 2019 Spanish version Cuales escuelas en Dallas ISD ofrecen educacion bilingue two way Garcia Joseph DISD staff backs boundary changes affecting 53 schools The Dallas Morning News January 11 1991 30A Retrieved on October 11 2 11 Macias Anna Montessori parents say school board deceptive Trustees set last minute public hearing The Dallas Morning News February 13 1991 Retrieved on October 11 2011 Garcia Joseph U S judge vetoes plan for schools The Dallas Morning News April 23 1992 Retrieved on October 11 2011 Garcia Joseph School board to appeal judge s ruling Trustees seek to move Montessori program The Dallas Morning News April 24 1992 Retrieved on October 11 2011 Holloway Karel STUDENT BODIES Enrollment surge prompts scramble for classroom space The Dallas Morning News November 15 1994 Home Final Education Extra 22A Retrieved on October 11 2011 a b c Suhler Jane Noble CUSTOM BUILT School designed to fit neighborhood draw in parents community The Dallas Morning News Tuesday August 4 1998 News 15A Retrieved on November 28 2011 Belt Mollie September 10 2020 Eddie Bernice Johnson Elementary School opens in Wilmer Dallas Examiner Retrieved October 13 2022 2019 20 Anson Jones Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 6 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 Who We Are Jerry R Junkins Elementary School Retrieved October 29 2019 Junkins is a Dallas Independent School District school located in Carrollton Texas Louise Wolff Kahn Elementary School Dallas Independent School District Archived from the original on October 24 1997 Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Arthur Kramer Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 Garcia Joseph DISD BOUNDARY CHANGES OUTLINED The Dallas Morning News March 9 1989 Retrieved on October 11 2011 Garcia Joseph DISD staff backs boundary changes affecting 53 schools The Dallas Morning News January 11 1991 30A Retrieved on October 11 2 11 Lakewood Elementary Expansion Foundation raises funds for overcrowded school The Dallas Morning News April 11 2014 Retrieved March 4 2020 a b Sick of Waiting on DISD Lakewood Elementary Parents Are Raising 15 Million for Expansion Dallas Observer July 2 2013 Retrieved June 13 2016 What s the whitest richest public school in Dallas Lakewood Elementary The Advocate February 17 2016 Retrieved January 1 2017 a b c d Hobbs Tawnell D Hacker Holly October 27 2015 Dallas ISD bond opponents say adjusting attendance zones could ease overcrowding The Dallas Morning News Retrieved October 21 2019 LEEF reaches 500 000 goal to Fund the Architect The Advocate Lakewood East Dallas June 20 2014 Retrieved October 21 2019 Mitchell Keri February 11 2015 Lakewood Stonewall elementary schools on Dallas ISD s list of most pressing facilities needs The Advocate Lakewood East Dallas Retrieved October 21 2019 Junius Heights Historic District Map Junius Heights Historic District Retrieved November 9 2019 PDF includes map of the district which indicates the locations of Lipscomb the library and Woodrow Wilson and Junius Heights Historic District City of Dallas Retrieved November 9 2019 includes map of the district Fischer Kent February 18 2008 Lipscomb parents want their school back The Dallas Morning News Retrieved November 9 2019 a b Jack Lowe Sr Elementary School Brochure Dallas Independent School District Accessed October 8 2008 2019 20 Maple Lawn Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 The History of Maple Lawn Elementary and the Mystery of its Name Maple Lawn Elementary School Retrieved April 7 2020 a b Lee A McShan Jr Elementary School Brochure Dallas Independent School District Accessed October 8 2008 Milam Ben Elementary Attendance Zone PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved April 7 2020 General Information Ben Milam Elementary School Retrieved April 7 2020 About Us Greenland Hills Neighborhood Association Retrieved October 21 2019 Auxter David Jean Pyfer Carol Huettig 2005 Principles and Methods of Adapted Physical Education and Recreation McGraw Hill p 542 ISBN 9780072843729 2019 2020 John J Pershing Elementary Attendance Zone grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 a b c d e Nicholson Eric An Ode to Charles Rice Learning Center the South Dallas School that Could Dallas Observer Thursday March 31 2016 Retrieved on June 24 2016 a b c Nicholson Eric DISD s Best Neighborhood School Is in South Dallas Dallas Observer Wednesday December 16 2015 Retrieved on June 24 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Vandals and thieves trashing Dallas ISD s closed schools The Dallas Morning News October 26 2013 Retrieved October 29 2019 a b Peterson Matt October 13 2015 Students parents build garden classroom at Dallas elementary school The Dallas Morning News Retrieved October 22 2019 a b Rogers Tim October 28 2013 Morning News Shows Poor Judgment Lousy Editing With Front Page DISD Story D Magazine Retrieved December 7 2023 Tone Joe October 31 2013 The News Says Parents Are Giving Up on This Dallas School But Parents Say Otherwise The Dallas Observer Retrieved December 7 2023 Rogers Tim October 30 2013 Morning News Shows Poor Judgment Lousy Editing With Front Page DISD Story Ctd D Magazine Retrieved December 7 2023 2019 20 Seagoville Elementary School Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Celestino Mauricio Soto Jr Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 a b Spoor Dana L Facing challenges American School amp University 71 4 December 1998 16 3 Jill Stone At Vickery Meadow Elementary School Dallas Independent School District Accessed October 8 2008 Hurst Marvin January 23 2024 New multimillion dollar DISD school breaks ground CBS News Texas Retrieved January 25 2024 2023 24 Attendance Zone Wilmer Hutchins Elementary School PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved December 20 2023 2019 20 Wilmer Hutchins Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved December 20 2023 2019 20 Harry C Withers Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 Hobbs Tawnell D Community activism propels Dallas elementary school to next level The Dallas Morning News posted by the Dallas Independent School District June 4 2013 Retrieved on March 30 2014 Zaragoza Elementary School Attendance Zone PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved April 7 2020 Home Wilmer Early Childhood Center Retrieved April 7 2020 211 Walnut St Wilmer TX 75172 Our Schools Wilmer Hutchins Independent School District October 8 2003 Archived from the original on October 8 2003 Retrieved April 7 2020 Wilmer Elementary 211 Walnut Street Wilmer Texas 75172 DISD Opens New Early Childhood Centers To Delight Of Parents KTVT July 30 2015 Retrieved July 30 2016 Ragland James October 25 2012 Old Forest Avenue High alumni celebrate Dallas school s heritage look to the future The Dallas Morning News Retrieved August 3 2018 Fox Jonathan December 28 2000 Not So Special Dallas Observer Retrieved October 22 2019 HEALTH SPECIAL HIGH SCHOOL Dallas Independent School District April 14 1997 Archived from the original on April 14 1997 Retrieved November 16 2019 2019 20 Edward H Cary Middle Attendance Zone Grades 6 8 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved November 16 2019 a b c d Allen Silas October 22 2019 After Tornado Some Dallas Students Move to New Schools Dallas Observer Retrieved October 30 2019 Erickson Bethany February 26 2020 With Cary Closure Dallas ISD Makes Plans for Middle Schoolers Preston Hollow People People Newspapers Retrieved October 13 2022 a b Zeeble Bill May 14 2018 Now Up To Standard Pinkston High Prepares To Absorb Failing Middle School KERA Retrieved January 8 2019 a b c Zeeble Bill May 7 2018 Dallas School To Close Even Though District Tried To Save It KERA Retrieved January 8 2019 East Dallas Schoolhouse The Dallas Morning News 31 December 1886 Stephen F Austin School The Dallas Morning News 2 March 1902 Buildings Fall 2011 James B Bonham Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved January 12 2020 James B Bonham Elementary Vickery Place July 29 2011 Retrieved January 12 2020 Stone Rachel January 27 2012 It s official Bonham Elementary will close Advocate Lakewood East Dallas Retrieved October 21 2019 Howard Greg May 25 2012 Sadness Loss as Bonham Elementary School Prepares for Consolidation Dallas Observer Retrieved October 21 2019 like the 89 year old James B Bonham Elementary 2012 13 Robert E Lee Elementary Attendance ZoneGrades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved January 12 2020 So Long City Park Elementary School Dallas Heritage Village Retrieved April 26 2016 Fall 2011 City Park Elementary Attendance Zone Grades PK 5 PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved April 26 2017 2012 13 Martin Luther King Jr Learning Center Attendance Zone PDF Dallas Independent School District Retrieved April 26 2017 Haag Matthew October 25 2013 Vandals and thieves trashing Dallas ISD s closed schools The Dallas Morning News Retrieved April 26 2017 Boardman Amanda March 14 2014 Vogel Alcove prepares for move to DISD s vacant City Park Elementary The Dallas Morning News Retrieved April 26 2017 Anglin Dionne Students Pass Classes They Never Took FOX 4 My Fox DFW Saturday November 19 2011 Retrieved on November 21 2011 Hacker Holly K Hobbs Tawnell D June 9 2010 Black flight changing the makeup of Dallas schools The Dallas Morning News A H Belo Corporation Retrieved March 11 2019 via DallasNews com DISD considers recommendation to reopen South Dallas learning center The Dallas Morning News November 8 2013 Retrieved October 31 2019 Vacant Elementary School Catches On Fire KTVT CBS DFW May 29 2016 Retrieved October 29 2019 Wheatley Place Preservation Dallas Retrieved October 29 2019 Dallas Landmark Commission Landmark Nomination Form Phyllis Wheatley Elementary School PDF City of Dallas April 26 1993 Retrieved October 29 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Dallas Independent School District schools amp oldid 1213746777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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