43°23′02″N 94°18′46″W / 43.383917°N 94.312665°W
North Kossuth Community School District | |
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![]() | |
Location | |
United States | |
Coordinates | 43.383917, -94.312665 |
District information | |
Type | Local school district |
Grades | K-12 |
Established | 1978 |
Superintendent | Travis Schueller |
Schools | 2 |
Budget | $5,858,000 (2020-21) [1] |
NCES District ID | 1920830 [1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 268 (2022-23) [1] |
Teachers | 24.46 FTE [1] |
Staff | 35.01 FTE [1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 10.96 [1] |
Athletic conference | Top of Iowa |
District mascot | Warriors |
Colors | Green and black |
Other information | |
Website |
nuwarriors |
North Kossuth Community School District is a rural public school district based in Swea City, Iowa. [2] Located in northern Kossuth County, it serves Swea City, Bancroft and Ledyard. [3]
As of 2015 [update], the district has about 300 students. [4] It operates an elementary and middle school in Swea City, consisting of North Kossuth Elementary School and North Union Middle School. [5] Its high school is North Union High School in Armstrong, of the North Union Community School District. [6] As part of a grade-sharing arrangement the North Union and North Kossuth districts send each other's students to their secondary schools, and in addition North Union and North Kossuth share a superintendent, Travis Schueller, and some other administrators. The North Kossuth district is branded as "North Union Schools" even though the two districts remain legally separate. [4]
It was formed on July 1, 1978, by the merger of the Swea City and Ledyard school districts, using "Cougars" as their mascot and blue and white as their school colors. [7]
In 2008, it began a grade-sharing arrangement with the Sentral Community School District. Later the Armstrong–Ringsted Community School District entered into a new grade-sharing arrangement with Sentral, and the two districts merged into North Union in 2014. [8]
In 2015, Schueller stated that area voters had emotional attachment to the school building but not the school district itself, which would make them more easily accept a future school district merger. [4]
43°23′02″N 94°18′46″W / 43.383917°N 94.312665°W
North Kossuth Community School District | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Location | |
United States | |
Coordinates | 43.383917, -94.312665 |
District information | |
Type | Local school district |
Grades | K-12 |
Established | 1978 |
Superintendent | Travis Schueller |
Schools | 2 |
Budget | $5,858,000 (2020-21) [1] |
NCES District ID | 1920830 [1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 268 (2022-23) [1] |
Teachers | 24.46 FTE [1] |
Staff | 35.01 FTE [1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 10.96 [1] |
Athletic conference | Top of Iowa |
District mascot | Warriors |
Colors | Green and black |
Other information | |
Website |
nuwarriors |
North Kossuth Community School District is a rural public school district based in Swea City, Iowa. [2] Located in northern Kossuth County, it serves Swea City, Bancroft and Ledyard. [3]
As of 2015 [update], the district has about 300 students. [4] It operates an elementary and middle school in Swea City, consisting of North Kossuth Elementary School and North Union Middle School. [5] Its high school is North Union High School in Armstrong, of the North Union Community School District. [6] As part of a grade-sharing arrangement the North Union and North Kossuth districts send each other's students to their secondary schools, and in addition North Union and North Kossuth share a superintendent, Travis Schueller, and some other administrators. The North Kossuth district is branded as "North Union Schools" even though the two districts remain legally separate. [4]
It was formed on July 1, 1978, by the merger of the Swea City and Ledyard school districts, using "Cougars" as their mascot and blue and white as their school colors. [7]
In 2008, it began a grade-sharing arrangement with the Sentral Community School District. Later the Armstrong–Ringsted Community School District entered into a new grade-sharing arrangement with Sentral, and the two districts merged into North Union in 2014. [8]
In 2015, Schueller stated that area voters had emotional attachment to the school building but not the school district itself, which would make them more easily accept a future school district merger. [4]