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Memphis City Schools Facts

 

Memphis City Schools
2597 Avery Avenue
Memphis, Tennessee 38112
(901) 416-5300

 

Relationships, Responsibilities, Results

Memphis City Schools is the largest school system in the State of Tennessee and the 21st largest school system in the nation and serves more than 119,000 students among 191 schools in grades K-12. Created as a special school district by a private act of the Tennessee General Assembly in 1869, Memphis City Schools (MCS) employs 16,500 people, including about 8,000 teachers, making it the second largest employer in the City of Memphis.

Our Demographics

  • 191 schools (112 elementary, 25 middle, 4 junior high, 31 high schools, 6 career and technology, 7 special schools, and 6 charter) are operated by MCS.
  • Approximately 87 percent of MCS students are black.
  • Approximately 9 percent of MCS students are white.
  • Approximately 4 percent of MCS students represent other nationalities.
  • Approximately 71 percent of MCS students are eligible for free or reduced lunch.
  • 14.4 percent of MCS students are enrolled in special education programs, and of that number, 12 percent are enrolled in special programs for gifted students.
  • In 2003-04, the system-wide graduation rate was 61 percent, with 5,532 Memphis City Schools students earning a terminal document (regular or honors diploma, GED, high school certificate or special education diploma). Of those students, 81 percent earned a regular or honors diploma on time (four years plus one summer).
  • Memphis City Schools employs approximately 16,500 people, making the district the second largest employer in the City of Memphis and the State of Tennessee.
  • Approximately 8,000 teachers are employed by Memphis City Schools.
  • Approximately 95 percent of Memphis City Schools teachers are “highly qualified” under No Child Left Behind Law standards.
  • 53 percent of Memphis City Schools teachers hold a master’s degree or higher.
  • Approximately 51 percent of MCS teachers are black.
  • Approximately 48 percent of MCS teachers are white.
  • Approximately 1 percent of MCS teachers represent other nationalities.

Our Reasons for Pride

  • Approximately $65 million in college scholarships were awarded to the 2004 senior class.
  • Memphis City Schools had the most students named as National Merit Semifinalists (22) than any school system in the State of Tennessee in 2004-05.
  • Memphis City Schools has more National Board Certified Teachers than any school system in the State of Tennessee. MCS has 40 National Board Certified Teachers, including 18 certified in December 2004, which was more than half of the 39 teachers certified during that time in Tennessee.
  • 100 percent of our schools are accredited through by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS).
  • Schools across the district are rated as among the best in the state and nation, including White Station High (ranked in top 20 in U.S. by Forbes magazine), Keystone Elementary (one of only 6 schools in the state named as Blue Ribbon School by U.S. Dept. of Education), and John P. Freeman Optional School (one of only 12 schools in the U.S. honored by American Board of Teacher Excellence), to name a few.
  • State-of-the-art facilities for learning and professional development are a part of Memphis City Schools, including the Teaching & Learning Academy, the first of its kind in the nation to be operated by a public school system, and the Telecommunications Center for radio and television, the only one like it in the State of Tennessee.
  • All classrooms in every school are Internet-wired to handle at least six computers.
  • Memphis City Schools was chosen as only one of five city school districts to participate in the New Leaders for New Schools project, which trains educators to become outstanding principals in urban schools. More than $4 million was raised by local foundations for this initiative.
  • Memphis City Schools was awarded a $1.6 million grant to bring the New Teacher Project to the district to develop new programs and improve old ones to attract and keep highly-qualified teachers.
  • Innovative services for students and parents are available, including a district-wide Customer Relations Department for parents (one-of-a-kind in Mid-South), the Deaf Education program at White Station High (first of its kind in Tennessee), Shrine School for disabled students (top school in Mid-South for recreational therapy), and the Colonial Vision & Hearing Limited Centers (for students with visual and hearing impairments), to name a few.
  • More than 650 business and community partners donate their time and money to MCS students through the Adopt-A-School program, which is being imitated around the country.
  • Memphis City Schools produce a number of successful alumni annually, such as actresses Kathy Bates and Cybil Shepherd, musicians Elvis Presley and Isaac Hayes, entrepreneurs Avron Fogleman and Abe Plough, corporate executives Kemmons Wilson of Holiday Inn and Vicki Roman of Coca-Cola, astrophysicist Alan Lightman, and civil rights activists Benjamin Hooks and Maxine Smith to name a few.

Budget Issues

  • Tennessee ranks 46th in the nation (among 50 states) in per-pupil spending for K-12 education.
  • Approximately 77 percent of MCS’ operating budget is devoted to instruction, primarily of salaries for teachers, principals and other instructional staff.
  • Approximately 13 percent is devoted to facilities operations, including maintenance and utilities costs associated with the operation of 191 schools.
  • The remaining 10 percent covers a variety of areas including supplies and materials, furniture and equipment, professional services, contracted services, administration, and transportation.
  • Only 1 percent of the MCS’ operating budget is devoted to administration.
  • MCS has operated without an increase in the operating budget each of the last three years. The last tax increase approved by the Shelby County Commission occurred three years ago in 2001.
  • To pay rising costs for utilities and new federal mandates for education without any increase in funding, more than $55 million has been cut from MCS’ operating budget in the last two years, including $25.28 million in reductions made in 2004.
  • The district has reduced school construction costs by 30 percent since 2000-01.
  • The independent MGT Study was implemented during the 2003-04 school year, and cost-cutting measures recommended by the study will save MCS over $7.4 million over a five-year period.
  • To increase efficiencies and accountability, the district is streamlining and combining administrative areas, using more energy-efficient technology and outsourcing some services.
  • Memphis City Schools is funded by various sources, including the State of Tennessee (44.7 percent of total or $346 million), Shelby County (29.8 percent or $230.8 million), a portion of county sales taxes (12.6 percent or $97.3 million), the City of Memphis (11.5 percent or $88.9 million) from a personal property tax for “school purposes” done annually since 1905, federal funds (1.1 percent or $8.3 million), and use of MCS fund balance reserves (about 1 percent or $5.1 million).

Our Programs/Services

  • Memphis City Schools offers optional programs at 31 elementary, middle, junior and senior high schools throughout the city, giving parents a number of educational choices for their child. Optional programs include courses that focus on college preparation, creative and performing arts, aviation, travel, tourism, health sciences, banking and finance, international studies and a variety of approaches to education.
  • English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) programs operate in 45 elementary schools, 11 middle schools and six high schools, serving more than 4,885 students from a variety of nationalities.
  • Memphis City Schools offers early childhood education programs in 54 schools, serving more than 1,200 students.
  • 12,000 students participate in Memphis Inter-Collegiate Athletic Association (MIAA) sanctioned sports, including 13 on the high school level and seven on the middle school level.
  • Memphis City Schools Nutrition Services operates a state-of-the-art facility, serving approximately 115,000 meals every day.
  • MCS employees are dedicated to the safety of the district’s school children. The system uses a variety of safety measures and tactics in schools, including metal detectors, the Officer in the School program, parent patrol groups, cameras, keyless entry systems, buzzer entry systems, ID badges, a detailed emergency response plan and required visitor check-in.

2004-05 Enrollment Information
(As of the Second Reporting Period, ending 10/05/04)

Breakdown by grade

Kindergarten 9,567
1st grade 9,698
2nd grade 9,134
3rd grade 9.052
4th grade 8,967
5th grade 9,263
6th grade 9,581
7th grade 9,830
8th grade 8,910
9th grade 10,730
10th grade 8,735
11th grade 7,124
12th grade 6,057
N (special education options, 7.8.9) 2,373
   
TOTAL 119,021



Breakdown by Race

White 10,629
Black 102,490
Hispanic 4,368
Asian 1,433
Indian 80
Pacific Islander 21
   
TOTAL 119,021



Breakdown by Sex

Female 58,150
Male 60,871
   
TOTAL 119,021

 

NOTE: Enrollment figures fluctuate during the school year. As of December 17, 2004, there were 120,162 students in the Memphis City Schools.

 

In this section

Directory of Schools

Alumni Hall of Fame

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Board Policies

School Websites


 
 
 


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Memphis City Schools does not discriminate in its programs or employment on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, handicap/disability, sex, or age.
For more information, please contact the Office of Equity Compliance at (901) 416-6670.