Bibb County School District is the county government agency which operates the public schools in Bibb County, Georgia, United States.
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Elementary schools
There are 21 elementary schools.
- Alexander II Magnet School
- Bernd Elementary School
- Bruce Elementary School
- Burdell-Hunt Magnet School
- Carter Elementary School
- Hartley Elementary School
- Heard Elementary School
- Heritage Elementary School
- Ingram-Pye Elementary School
- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School
- Lane Elementary School
- Porter Elementary School
- John R. Lewis Elementary School, named for U.S. congressman John R. Lewis
- Skyview Elementary School
- Southfield Elementary School
- Springdale Elementary School
- Taylor Elementary School
- Union Elementary School
- Veterans Elementary School
- Vineville Academy of the Arts
- Williams Elementary School
Middle schools
There are six middle schools.
- Appling Middle School
- Ballard-Hudson Middle School - built in 1949 after the merger of Ballard High School (originally Lewis High School, established in 1868 by the American Missionary Association) and Hudson High School, a public industrial high school
- Howard Middle School
- Miller Magnet Middle School
- Rutland Middle School
- Weaver Middle School
High schools
There are six high schools.
Specialty schools
- Elam Alexander Academy
- Northwoods Early Childhood Academy
Bibb County Schools were segregated, were integrated after court orders, and have been resegregating in recent decades.[9]
"White County". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved May 30, 2024.
Blankenship, Debbie; Ragusea, Adam (August 17, 2017). "Racial concentration on the rise in Bibb schools". The Telegraph (Macon, Georgia). Retrieved November 11, 2022. The proportion of white students attending Bibb County public schools has dropped by more than 40 percent over the last 20 years. At the same time, the population of black students has held relatively steady. When the state released its fall 2016 school enrollment data last month, the Bibb County numbers showed total enrollment of 23,988, with 17,354 of the students identified as black and 4,483 as white. That stands in contrast to 20 years ago, when Bibb's school enrollment was 24,840, with 16,680 students identified as black and 7,829 as white. The racial distribution among the schools has also changed. Central High School, for example, had a racial breakdown of 58.5 percent black and 41.4 white in 1996. Today, that number stands at 92.6 percent black and 7.3 percent white.