Humble Independent School District Explained
Humble Independent School District |
Address: | 10203 Birchridge Drive |
Zipcode: | 77338 |
Grades: | PKâ12 |
Established: | [1] |
Superintendent: | Elizabeth Fagen |
Schools: | 48 |
Enrollment: | 43,553 (2018â2019) |
Teachers: | 2,775.78 |
Staff: | 2,650.32 |
Ratio: | 15.69 |
Humble Independent School District is a school district located in Humble, Texas, United States. It serves the city of Humble, small portions of the city of Houston (including the community of Kingwood), and portions of unincorporated Harris County (including the communities of Atascocita and Fall Creek[2]). A small section of the district extends into Montgomery County.[3] For the 2018â2019 school year, the district enrolled 43,553 students.
Humble ISD currently has five high schools, one magnet high school, seven middle schools, and twenty-five elementary schools. The district's flagship high school, Humble High School, opened in 1918. It later moved to a new building, Charles Bender High School in 1929, and eventually to its current location on Wilson Road, as Humble High School, in 1965. In 1979, Humble ISD opened Kingwood High School in the northern part of the district. Quest High School, the district's magnet high school of choice, opened in 1995 in the Community Learning Center.
In recent years, Humble ISD has become one of the fastest growing school districts in Texas. Humble High School's population grew to over 3000 students, which led to the opening of Atascocita High School in 2006. AHS was designed with smaller learning communities, in which students take their core classes in one of eight houses located at the school. After the opening of AHS, Humble and Kingwood High Schools were renovated and installed with smaller learning communities. In 2007, the district opened Kingwood Park High School at the former Kingwood ninth grade campus. Continued growth in the southern part of the district led to Humble ISD building Summer Creek High School, which opened in 2009.
In 2010, the school district was rated "recognized" by the Texas Education Agency.[4]
History
Circa 1996, prior to the City of Houston annexing Kingwood, 2,600 people lived in both the City of Houston and within Humble ISD.[5] it is one of the school districts in the state with the highest growth rates.[6]
Schools
High schools
High schools in Humble ISDSchool | Atascocita | Humble | Kingwood | Kingwood Park | Summer Creek | Sconzo Early College |
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Location | Atascocita[7] | Humble | Houston | Houston | Harris County | Humble |
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Year opened | 2006 | 1965[8] | 1979 | 2007[9] | 2009 | 1995 |
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School colors | Red, white, blue | Purple, white | Navy blue, light blue, white | Forest green, silver, black | Maroon, gold | Forest green, gold |
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School mascot | Eagle | Wildcat | Mustang | Panther | Bulldog | Knight |
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Principal | Will Falker | Donna Ulrich | Michael Nasra | Lisa Drabing | Brent McDonald | Terri Osborne |
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University Interscholastic League classification | 6A | 5A | 6A | 5A | 6A | N/A |
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Enrollment | 3,621 | 1,698 | 2,725 | 1,643 | 2,019 | 393 | |
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Notes
Middle schools
- Atascocita
- Creekwood
- Humble
- Kingwood
- Riverwood
- Ross Sterling
- Timberwood
- West Lake
- Woodcreek
- Autumn Ridge
Elementary schools
Feeders of Atascocita MS
- Maplebrook Elementary School (Atascocita)
- Pine Forest Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
- Timbers Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
- Fall Creek, Lakeshore and Summerwood elementary schools fed into Atascocita MS before the opening of Woodcreek MS
Feeders of Creekwood MS
- Bear Branch Elementary School (Houston)
- Greentree Elementary School (Houston)
- Hidden Hollow Elementary School (Houston)
- Pine Forest Elementary School (Kings River sections 9-10 only)
Feeders of Humble MS
- North Belt Elementary School (Humble, unincorporated area)
- Park Lakes Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
- Whispering Pines Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
Feeders of Kingwood MS
- Bear Branch Elementary School (partial)
- Elm Grove Elementary School (Houston)
- Foster Elementary School (Houston)
- Woodland Hills Elementary School (Houston)
Feeders of Riverwood Middle School
- Deerwood Elementary School (Houston)
- Shadow Forest Elementary School (Houston)
- Willow Creek Elementary School (Houston)
Feeders of Ross Sterling MS
- Humble Elementary School (Humble)
- Jack M. Fields Sr. Elementary School (Humble)
- Lakeland Elementary School (Humble)
- River Pines Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
Feeders of Timberwood MS
- Atascocita Springs Elementary School (Humble, opening August 2010)[10]
- Eagle Springs Elementary School (Atascocita, opened in 2005)
- Oak Forest Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
- Oaks Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
Feeders of Woodcreek MS
- Fall Creek Elementary School
- Lakeshore Elementary School (Houston, opened August 2009)
- Ridge Creek Elementary School
- Summerwood Elementary School (Atascocita, unincorporated area)
Feeders Of Autumn Ridge MS
Notes
Notes and References
- Web site: 36th R.S., HB 332 CH 13, "Creating the Humble Independent School District in Harris County" . Legislative Reference Library of Texas . . 1 May 2020.
- "Schools ." Fall Creek. Retrieved on January 23, 2010.
- Web site: 2020 CENSUS - SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: Montgomery County, TX. U.S. Census Bureau. 2022-06-27. 11 (PDF p. 12/12). - See text list
- Web site: 2009 Accountability Rating System . Texas Education Agency . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151025190535/http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/account/2009/index.html . 2015-10-25 .
- Web site: City of Houston Annexation FAQ. https://web.archive.org/web/19961031170034/http://www.ci.houston.tx.us/annexation/annexation_FAQ.html. dead. 1996-10-31. City of Houston. 1996-10-31. 2018-04-24. About 2,600 residents of the Humble Independent School District are located within the City of Houston, without any effect on their school district status.. - This page was written and published before the date of Kingwood being annexed.
- News: Kesbeh, Dina. Humble ISD one of the fastest growing districts in Texas. Houston Chronicle. 2017-03-01. 2017-03-02.
- Unincorporated
- Originally opened in 1918 as Humble High School; moved to a new building in 1929 as Charles Bender High School; moved to its current location and gained current name in 1965.
- The building had previously been a 9th grade campus for Kingwood High School.
- Constructed to LEED and Collaborative for High Performance Schools standards