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Goree Independent School District

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Defunct school district in Texas, United States
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Goree Independent School District was a public school district based in Goree, Texas (USA).

The district consisted of a single campus - Goree School - that served students in grades pre-kindergarten through twelve. It was located in southeastern Knox County and extended into northeastern Haskell and northwestern Throckmorton counties.

Goree School was the 1972 and 1973 Texas eight-man football state champions. The eight-man title was contested for only four years (1972 through 1975); thus, Goree won 50 percent of the titles.

District enrollment (1989-2003)

  • 1989–90 - 109 students
  • 1990–91 - 103 students
  • 1991–92 - 97 students
  • 1992–93 - 90 students
  • 1993–94 - 83 students
  • 1994–95 - 93 students
  • 1995–96 - 80 students
  • 1996–97 - 92 students
  • 1997–98 - 82 students
  • 1998–99 - 69 students
  • 1999–00 - 63 students
  • 2000–01 - 56 students
  • 2001–02 - 57 students
  • 2002–03 - 47 students

The ethnic composition of students in the 2002-2003 school year was 34 Hispanic (72%), 9 White (19%), and 4 African American (9%). Of the 47 students, 45 (95.7%) were considered economically disadvantaged.

Student performance

Goree ISD's performance on the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills (TAAS), a state standardized test used from 1991 to 2003, generally met state standards. The district was rated "academically acceptable" from 1994 to 2002. In its final year, 2002-2003, Goree received an "academically unacceptable" rating due to a low passing rate on the Social Studies portion of the test.

Consolidation

The district, faced with a rapidly declining enrollment, held a vote on November 5, 2002 on whether or not to merge with the larger Munday Independent School District. In order for the proposal to pass, voters in both Goree and Munday had to approve the plan.

In Goree, 84 voted for consolidation (83.2%) while 17 voted against it (16.8%). Munday voters approved the plan by a margin of 446–30 (93.7%–6.3%).

On July 1, 2003, the merger took effect, creating the Munday Consolidated Independent School District. When classes resumed in August, the Goree campus became Munday Junior High School, serving the district's seventh and eighth graders.

References

  1. "CONSOLIDATIONS, ANNEXATIONS AND NAME CHANGES FOR TEXAS PUBLIC SCHOOLS" (PDF). Texas Education Agency. Retrieved 2022-07-01.

External links

School districts in Texas served by Region 9 Education Service Center
Archer County
Consolidated
Baylor County
Consolidated
Clay County
Cooke County
Cottle County
Foard County
Hardeman County
Haskell County
Consolidated
Jack County
King County
Knox County
Consolidated
  • Goree ISD
  • Montague County
    Parker County
    Stephens County
    Throckmorton County
    Consolidated
  • Goree ISD
  • Megargel ISD
  • Wichita County
    Wilbarger County
    Wise County
    Young County
    Consolidated
    This list is incomplete
    Some districts extend into counties which mostly have districts in other ESCs
    Defunct school districts in Texas since 1983-1984
    1980s
    1990s
    2000s
    2010s
    2020s
    Categories: