Mountain Youth School

Mountain Youth School (MYS) was one of a very small group of alternative schools set up by the state of North Carolina for students that would benefit in an alternative classroom setting. It is located in Murphy, North Carolina and serves grades 612. It was the only alternative school operated by the Cherokee County Schools. Replaced in 2017, by The Oaks Academy, an Alternative school in Marble, North Carolina. As of 2007 it had an active enrollment of 43 students and a full-time teaching staff of 8 teachers giving an average of 5 students per teacher.[1][2][3]

Mountain Youth School
Address
4533 Martins Creek Road

28906

United States
Coordinates35°01′27″N 84°01′51″W
Information
School typePublic, Alternative School
Opened1997 (1997)
Closed2017
School districtCherokee County Schools
CEEB code342824
PrincipalWilliam Gaither
Staff11
Teaching staff8
Grades612
Age range1218
Enrollment5065 (varies)
ClassesComputer App, Masonry
Student to teacher ratio10:1
Color(s)Maroon and white
  
MascotMustangs
Websitesites.google.com/a/cherokee.k12.nc.us/mountain-youth-school/

History

In the summer of 1997, the North Carolina General Assembly set forth an allocation of more than $10,000 to establish the Mountain Youth Center. The name was changed in the 20042005 school year to Mountain Youth School.[4]

School improvement plan

In 2005, Bill Gaither and several of the staff members set out an improvement plan to address the particular issues plaguing the school:[5]

  • Reduction in drop-out rate.
  • Faculty and staff need continuing staff development related to alternative settings.
  • Reduction in absenteeism.
  • Accountability standards are difficult to meet for many students.
  • Additional metal building for construction shop and additional classroom space.
  • Additional certified staff or full-time staff members to expand curriculum.

Demographics

As of 2010, the school was predominantly non-Hispanic white (83.7%) with 4.7% of the student populace being non-Hispanic black. The school also housed 2.3% Hispanic students and a relatively high percentage of Native American or Alaskan students at 9.3%. There were no students of Asian or Pacific Islander descent.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.