- Source: Ruthven-Ayrshire Community School District
Ruthven-Ayrshire Community School District is a rural public school district headquartered in Ruthven, Iowa. Also serving Ayrshire, the district is located in Palo Alto and Clay counties.
History
The district was formed on July 1, 1983, by the merger of the Ayrshire School District and the Ruthven School District. On July 1, 2010, the South Clay Community School District was dissolved, and portions went to Ruthven-Ayrshire.
In 2011, the district and the Graettinger–Terril Community School District agreed to do athletic team sharing. In 2013, the district and Graettinger–Terril agreed to a partial-day sharing arrangement in that high school students may spend portions of their school days at each campus for certain courses. They began discussing the idea in October 2012. They had discussed the possibility of whole grade-sharing, but Ruthven-Ayrshire canceled those talks in January 2013, stating that it wanted to have its own students in its own high school. Ruthven-Ayrshire has a partial day sharing agreement with the Emmetsburg Community School District.
Schools
The district operates two schools, both in Ruthven:
Ruthven-Ayrshire Elementary School
Ruthven-Ayrshire High School
= Ruthven-Ayrshire High School
=The Titans compete in the Twin Lakes Conference in the following sports as G-T/R-A:
Cross country
Volleyball
Football
Basketball
Wrestling
Track and field
Golf
Baseball
Softball
See also
List of school districts in Iowa
List of high schools in Iowa
References
Further reading
Daily, Kris Todd (June 14, 2011). "Ruthven-Ayrshire patrons respond to staffing turnaround". The Daily Reporter.
External links
Ruthven-Ayrshire Community School District
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ruthven-Ayrshire Community School District
- Ayrshire, Iowa
- Ruthven, Iowa
- Graettinger–Terril Community School District
- Emmetsburg Community School District
- List of school districts in Iowa
- South Clay Community School District
- Cornbelt Conference
- List of high schools in Iowa
- Angus, Scotland