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School district in North Dakota, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Salem-Almont Public School District 49 is a school district headquartered in New Salem, North Dakota. It includes two schools in New Salem: Prairie View Elementary School and New Salem-Almont High School.
New Salem-Almont School District | |
---|---|
Address | |
310 Elm Avenue
New Salem , North Dakota, 58563United States | |
District information | |
Type | Public |
Grades | PreK–12[1] |
NCES District ID | 3800392[1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 346[1] |
Teachers | 33.88[1] |
Staff | 30.41[1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 10.21[1] |
Other information | |
Website | www |
It serves New Salem and Almont in Morton County.[2] It also serves sections of Grant County and Oliver County.[3][4] It takes high school students from the Sweet Briar School District.[5]
The current eight-classroom elementary school opened circa 1963, and the current 17-classroom secondary school, built for $400,000, opened in 1963.[6]
The New Salem district ordered the Judson School, which had 18 students, closed in 1976. The per-student cost in 1976 was $1,400, which was higher than the school district average of $952. Officials of the North Dakota Department of Public Instruction argued that the school was in a bad facility condition and should not continue to operate. By 1976 William Heisler, the Morton County superintendent of schools, was to determine whether the Judson School should reopen.[7]
In 1981 the North Dakota Supreme Court was deliberating whether the district and the Mandan School District could receive funds from coal impact money from the state, with the definition of a "tipple" being a determining factor.[8]
The New Salem district had 399 students in 1999.[9]
By 2005 the Sims School District of Almont sent high school students to New Salem, as the Sims district was now elementary only.[10] In 2008 the Sims district merged into New Salem,[11] and its remaining elementary school closed; in Fall 2008 the North Dakota Department of Public Instruction listed Almont Elementary as being "nonoperating".[12]
In 2017 the high school principal, Michael Gilbertson, applied to be on Bismarck Public Schools's school board.[13]
The district had a school bond vote scheduled for October 1, 2019 as the district wanted to expand the elementary school, including having a special education unit in six new rooms.[14]
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