Dublin City School District | |
Grades: | PK-12 |
Superintendent: | John Marschhausen |
Teachers: | 838.46 |
Staff: | 2,435.8 |
Students: | 16,400 |
Ratio: | 19.39 |
Address: | 5175 Emerald Pkwy |
The Dublin City School District, also known as Dublin City Schools, is a public school district in Ohio. It encompasses 47sqmi, and serves most of the city of Dublin, Ohio, as well as part of the city of Columbus, and unincorporated parts of Delaware and Union Counties.
In the fall of 2022, district enrollment exceeded 16,000 students attending its twenty-two schools.[1]
In Franklin County, the district includes most of Dublin and sections of Columbus and Upper Arlington. The district covers portions of Washington Township and Perry Township.[2]
In Delaware County, the district includes that county's portion of Dublin, and Shawnee Hills. The sections in the county cover part of Washington Township.[3]
In Union County, the district includes that county's portion of Dublin. The sections in the county cover part of Jerome Township.[4]
As a PK-5 district, Dublin City Schools offers a foundational skills and content based curriculum. For middle school students, the district is focused on the student experience in pathways and core areas. The curriculum of the three high schools in the Dublin City School District includes AP, IB, CCP and pathway focused academies.[5]
See also: Japanese community of Columbus, Ohio.
The Dublin City Schools student body represents more than 100 countries and speaks more than 70 different languages.[6]
The Dublin City School District’s English Learner Department (EL) has continued to grow each year. The district currently ranks as the 6th largest EL population in the state of Ohio. The district’s EL students represent approximately 70 countries and speak 70 different languages. The top languages currently spoken by the students in the EL program are Spanish, Arabic, Japanese, Korean and Chinese.[7]
A ReMax real estate agent named Akiko Miyamoto stated in Car Talk that the services provided for Japanese speakers by the school district attract Japanese expatriates to Dublin. The district offers Japanese interpreters who send e-mails written in Japanese, provide interpretation services at school events, and translate documents.[8]
In 2007, Wyandot Elementary School had 568 students, including 94 Asian students, with most of them being Japanese. To serve English as a second language students, Wyandot, in 2007, had collection of 150 books in Japanese, Korean, Spanish, and French in its library, including works by Japanese authors and translations of American children's books. Many Japanese and Korean families, as of that year, donated foreign language books to the library.[9]
In 2023, the Dublin City School District graduated 1,218 students, which included 576 honors diplomas, 81 college-signed athletes, 33 International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Candidates, 25 National Merit Finalists, 11 students committed to the military, and 9 President Scholars. This 2023 class achieved a 4.1 graduation readiness per student, more than double the state minimum.