Blue Springs R-IV School District
Location
Kansas City Metropolitan Area
United States
District information
TypePublic
MottoEducation with Distinction
GradesPreK–12
PresidentRhonda Gilstrap
Vice-presidentKurt Swanson
SuperintendentBob Jerome
AccreditationMissouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
Schools22
Budget$143,226,000 (2010–11)
NCES District ID2905310[1]
Students and staff
Students14,000
Teachers1027
Staff1,486
Student–teacher ratio1:16
Other information
Websitebssd.net

The Blue Springs R-IV School District is a school district that serves Blue Springs, Missouri in the Kansas City metropolitan area. The district has an enrollment of over 14,500 students.[2] The mission statement of the Blue Springs R-IV School District is to create an educational community in which each individual acquires knowledge, develops skills, and functions as a literate citizen to achieve personal goals. The Department of Elementary and Secondary Education reported that Blue Springs School District once again received a perfect score on the Annual Performance Report in 2011. This is the eleventh year in a row that the district has received a perfect score. This is determined by a number of factors including student achievement. The Blue Springs School District is one of only seven school districts in this state to have eleven consecutive years of distinction.

The district also serves a small southwestern portion of Independence, small northern portion of Lee's Summit, all of Lake Tapawingo and parts of unincorporated Jackson County, Missouri.[3]

History

The community of Blue Springs was founded in 1845 near today's Burris Old Mill Park on Woods Chapel Road and Walnut Street. The town quickly discovered a need for a schoolhouse. The district was founded in 1845. Blue Springs town built its first wood-frame one-room school on Woods Chapel Road during this period. This schoolhouse was razed in 1884 and a new wood-frame one-room school was built at the same location.

In 1879 the railroad built a train depot one mile east of the original community of Blue Springs next to the new railroad tracks. The town moved to its present location to take advantage of the commerce the train depot would provide. The city of Blue Springs was incorporated as a city in 1880. The City of Blue Springs continued to grow as the old town declined as businesses and families moved to the new Blue Springs. The town children continued to attend the old schoolhouse in what became known as "Old Blue Springs" for some time.

In 1905 Blue Springs built its first two-story brick schoolhouse for the growing community. This school was built at 16th and Summit Streets. By this time, the old one-room schoolhouse on Woods Chapel Road in "Old Blue Springs" was still being used but was now considered a rural or separate school district rather than part of the Blue Springs "city" public schools.

The first brick schoolhouse was razed in 1924 after the 1923 opening of a larger new two-story brick schoolhouse. This brick school house was built adjacent to the old brick school house. This new school was simply called the Blue Springs School. All students of the Blue Springs School District attended first through twelfth grades at this school until 1951. The last graduating class from this school was the class of 1955. The school remained in use by the district until the 1990s and was later renamed Hansel Lowe School. It was eventually no longer used by the district and was sold to Timothy Lutheran Church. Timothy Lutheran Church used it as a school until they also built a new school. Today the school building is used as a private residence.

A practice of consolidating smaller school districts to eliminate one room school houses to better serve students was being completed across the state of Missouri. This happened in Blue Springs in 1949. That year an election was held and 10 one room school houses or smaller school districts joined Blue Springs 'city' Public School District to become the Reorganized Blue Springs Missouri R-IV School District. The schools consolidated were as follows: Pleasant Grove, Eureka, Sunny Vale, Williams, Fairview, Old Blue Springs, Sunny Side, Delta, Baird and Moreland.

The population growth of the City of Blue Springs increased the need for space for students. In 1951, Thomas Ulitcan Elementary School opened as the first designated elementary school in the district. In 1955 the current freshman center on Vesper St. was completed as Blue Springs High School. This was the district's first high school. The first graduating class of the new high school was the class of 1956. Franklin Smith Elementary School named for the founder of Blue Springs, opened its doors in 1967, as the second Elementary School in the district. The current Blue Springs High School opened its doors to students in 1971.

Since that time the district has continued to have rapid growth and has grown to have 13 elementary schools, 4 middle schools, 1 freshman center, 2 high schools, 1 alternative high school, 1 educational trap house and a special education center.

Schools

Elementary

  • Chapel Lakes Elementary School
  • Cordill-Mason Elementary School
  • Daniel Young Elementary School
  • Franklin Smith Elementary School
  • James Lewis Elementary School
  • James Walker Elementary School
  • John Nowlin Elementary School
  • Lucy Franklin Elementary School
  • Sunny Pointe Elementary School
  • Thomas Ultican Elementary School
  • Voy Spears Elementary School
  • William Bryant Elementary School
  • William Yates Elementary School

Middle Schools

  • Brittany Hill Middle School
  • Delta Woods Middle School
  • Moreland Ridge Middle School
  • Paul Kinder Middle School (formerly Sunny Vale)

High Schools

  • Blue Springs Freshman Campus
  • Blue Springs North "High School"
  • Blue Springs South High School
  • Valley View High School

The Blue Springs School District also offers "Liggett Trail Education Center" which is a setting designed to address the needs of students from age 3 to 21 years with Special Needs or Disabilities. It is mainly an Early Childhood Special Education Center for 3- to 5-year-olds. Emphasis is upon school/parent communication, developmentally appropriate practices, specialized therapies and team approach that allows each student to work toward his or her potential.

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for Blue Springs R-iv". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences.
  2. "BSSD About Us". bssd.net. Archived from the original on March 15, 2010. Retrieved October 16, 2017.
  3. "School Districts." City of Independence. Retrieved on January 5, 2017.
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