Watson Chapel School District | |
Location: | 4000 Camden Road Pine Bluff, Arkansas 71603-9094 |
Type: | Public (government funded) |
Students: | 2215 |
Schools: | 5 |
Teachers: | 208 |
Ratio: | 14.85 |
Grades: | K–12 |
Website: | Watson Chapel School District |
Watson Chapel School District No. 24[1] (WCSD) is a public school district serving the communities of Pine Bluff (including Watson Chapel) and Sulphur Springs within Jefferson County, Arkansas, United States.[2] Headquartered in Pine Bluff, Watson Chapel School District employs over 300 faculty and staff to provide educational programs for students ranging from kindergarten through twelfth grade and enrolls more than 2,200 students.
In 1971 the district covered 125sqmi of land.[1]
All schools in the district are accredited by AdvancED (formerly the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools).
Initially the Dollarway School District (DSD) sent older white students to Watson Chapel High School and other area high schools, as it did not have its own high school for white students nor one for black students.[3] In 1957 DSD opened its own high school for white children, Dollarway High School.[4]
District Court for Eastern District of Arkansas judge Oren Harris, in 1971, ordered the Watson Chapel School Board to desegregate schools. Prior to that order black students largely attended two schools while white students attended four of them. Under the judge's orders there would be a single high school, Watson Chapel High School, a single middle school, the former Coleman High School/Coleman Elementary School, and four elementary schools.[5]
In 1979 the Jefferson County School District dissolved, with a portion of the students going to the Watson Chapel school district.[6]
In 2007, the ACLU sued the school district because the dress code allegedly denied students their first amendment rights.[7]
It had 3,871 students in the 1969–1970 school year, with more than half within the city limits of Pine Bluff. That year the four schools for white children had 2,135 white students and 96 black students; the two schools for black children had 1,640 students, with all being black.[1]
In 1971 the schools had 3,750 students, with about 45% of them being black.[5]