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Benoit School District

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33°38′13″N 91°01′39″W  /  33.636891°N 91.027492°W  / 33.636891; -91.027492 The Benoit School District ( BSD ) was a public school district serving, in Bolivar County , Mississippi ( USA ): Benoit , Scott , and areas around those two settlements.

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9-659: The sole school of the district was the Ray Brooks School (Grades PK-12), in unincorporated Bolivar County. The district headquarters was previously in a building in Benoit. Later it was in Ray Brooks itself. On July 1, 2014, the district consolidated into the West Bolivar Consolidated School District . Ray Brooks itself continued to operate until its 2020 closure. Beginning in 1986 district students at

18-590: Is despite the school building perceived to be in better condition than others, with it being larger and newer than others. The two board members of the Rosedale area and one board member of the Shaw area, school board president Jackie Lloyd, voted to close Ray Brooks. The closure reflects a population loss occurring in the Mississippi Delta area. Tamara Lopez of Delta News TV stated "Residents in Benoit had mixed reactions to

27-580: The Mississippi Legislature passed a bill that required five school districts in Bolivar County to consolidate into two larger ones. On July 1, 2014, the Benoit district consolidated into the West Bolivar Consolidated School District . West Bolivar closed Ray Brooks in 2020. The school district had 287 students as of 2012. As of that year, of the 152 school districts in the State of Mississippi, Benoit

36-640: The high school level did not attend Ray Brooks (previously Nugent Center School, a.k.a. Benoit High School), but instead West Bolivar High School of the West Bolivar School District, in Rosedale . However high school classes at Ray Brooks resumed in 2000. Linda Coleman, a Democrat member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from Mound Bayou , stated that the costs of transporting children to West Bolivar from Benoit were too high. In 2012

45-527: The state. High school classes resumed in 2000. Linda Coleman, a Democrat member of the Mississippi House of Representatives from Mound Bayou , stated that the costs of transporting children to West Bolivar from Benoit were too high. The first high school class of that generation graduated in 2002. In 2002 the school was the second smallest school in the state. It was operated by the Benoit School District until July 1, 2014, when that district

54-641: Was a K-12 school in unincorporated Bolivar County, Mississippi , near Benoit . In September 2015 it had 214 students. Its namesake was its first principal, Ray Brooks; it was originally known as the Nugent Center School , and until 2014 was the only school of the Benoit School District , which served Benoit and Scott . From 2014 until 2020, it was a part of the West Bolivar Consolidated School District . Ray Brooks School closed in 2020. The school built in 1959, originally served grades 1-12. It

63-415: Was also known as Benoit High School . In 1986 it was redesignated as a Kindergarten through 9th grade school. High school students were assigned to West Bolivar High School of the West Bolivar School District, in Rosedale . In 1998 the school received its current name. In 1999 it had 320 students, and in 2000 it had 268 students; that year principal Barbara Akon described it as the smallest school in

72-485: Was consolidated into West Bolivar Consolidated. In 2020 there were a total of 161 students with each grade level having 20 or fewer students. In 2020 the West Bolivar board voted to close Ray Brooks on a 3 to 2 basis due to declining tax revenue and enrollment district wide, with Ray Brooks chosen to close as it was more distant and because, of the options, the fewest children would have changes to their schooling. This

81-564: Was the smallest K-12 district (meaning the smallest which had all thirteen grade levels) and one of the 20 smallest school districts overall in the state. As of 2012, the district was, on a state seven step accountability rating, given the third lowest, "low performing," due to test scores. As of the same year the school had a 92% graduation rate, which is much higher than the Mississippi state average. Students were required to wear school uniforms . Ray Brooks School Ray Brooks School

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