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The School District of Palm Beach County ( SDPBC) is the tenth-largest public school district in the United States, [4] and the fifth largest school district in Florida. The district encompasses all of Palm Beach County. [5] For the beginning of the 2018–2019 academic year, enrollment totaled 192,533 students in Pre-K through 12th grades. [2]
Palm Beach County is a county in the southeastern part of Florida, located in the Miami metropolitan area. It is Florida's third-most populous county after Miami-Dade County and Broward County and the 26th-most populous in the United States, with 1,492,191 residents as of the 2020 census. [2] Its county seat and largest city is West Palm Beach ...
The school opened as Forest Hill High School in 1959; it is situated next to the West Palm Beach Country Club and I-95 in the southwestern corner of the City of West Palm Beach on a compact 17.38-acre (70,300 m 2) tract. A larger building replaced the original structure on the same site in 2004. The school was first accredited in 1961.
Currently, 823 students who live in Riviera Beach attend Palm Beach Gardens High, 541 attend Dwyer, 130 attend Inlet Grove, 130 attend Suncoast and 103 go to school at Palm Beach Lakes High.
The calendar for Palm Beach County schools for the 2024-25 school year. When is the last day of school in Palm Beach County 2025? Palm Beach County students will end the school year on Friday, May 30.
The school is managed by educators, and has no governing board. Children of faculty and staff receive full tuition at the school. [2] In January 1999, American Heritage Schools acquired All-Star Academy in Delray Beach, Florida, establishing it as the school's second campus, Palm Beach Campus.
In 1965, Palm Beach Junior College merged with Roosevelt Junior College, which was established in 1958 under President Britton Sayles to serve African American students. In 1968, control over the college passed from the Palm Beach County school district to a board of trustees. In 1978, the college opened its Belle Glade campus.
The board voted 7-2 to hire Peter Licata, 58, a regional superintendent in Palm Beach County Public Schools who attended first grade at McNab Elementary in Pompano Beach.