Greece Central School District
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The Greece Central School District is a public school district in New York State that serves approximately 14,000 students in the town of Greece in Monroe County with over 3,700 employees and an operating budget of $180 million (~$13,489 per student).[1]
The average class size is 21 students and the student-teacher ratio is 23:1 (elementary), 14-19:1 (middle-high school).[2]
The district is the largest suburban school district in Monroe County and the eighth-largest district in New York State[citation needed]. The Greece Central School District was created in July 1928.
Steven Achramovitch is the Superintendent of Schools.
Contents |
[edit] Board of Education
The Board of Education (BOE) consists of 9 members who serve rotating 3-year terms. Elections are held each May for board members and to vote on the School District Budget.
2007-2008 Board of Education
President
- Mr. Roger W. Boily
Vice President
- Mrs. Julia M. VanOrman
Board Members
- Mrs. Carolyn A. Hauer
- Mr. Charles C. Hubbard
- Mr. Frank A. Oberg
- Mrs. Gale G. O'Toole
- Mr. Jeff W. Smith
- Mr. Patrick E. Tydings
[edit] Schools
By convention, elementary schools are named after the road on which they are located. Middle and high schools use classical Greek names.
[edit] Elementary Schools
- Autumn Lane
- Craig Hill
- English Village
- Holmes Road
- Buckman Heights
- Kirk Road
- Lakeshore
- Longridge
- Paddy Hill
- Parkland-Brookside
- Pine Brook
- West Ridge
[edit] Middle Schools
- Apollo Middle
- Arcadia Middle
- Athena Middle
- Odyssey Academy (6-12)
[edit] High Schools
- Arcadia High
- Athena High
- Odyssey Academy (6-12)
- Olympia High
[edit] Bird's Eye Images
[edit] Elementary Schools
- Autumn Lane
- Craig Hill
- English Village
- Holmes Road
- Buckman Heights
- Kirk Road
- Lakeshore
- Longridge
- Paddy Hill
- Parkland
- Brookside
- Pine Brook
- West Ridge
[edit] Middle Schools
[edit] High Schools
[edit] Performance
In June 2007, the American Music Conference recognized the district as being among the 2007 "Best 100 Communities for Music Education".[3]
On May 23, 2005, President Bush visited the Athena Performing Arts Center.