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Ann Arbor Public Schools, Michigan

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Ann Arbor Public Schools
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Washtenaw County, Michigan
District details
Superintendent:Jazz Parks
# of school board members:7
Website:Link

Ann Arbor Public Schools is aschool district inMichigan.

Click on the links below to learn more about the school district's...

Superintendent

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This information is updated as we become aware of changes. Pleasecontact us with any updates.

Jazz Parks is the superintendent of Ann Arbor Public Schools. Parks was appointed interim superintendent in November 2023.[1]

Parks was named superintendent of Ann Arbor Public Schools on March 20, 2024.[2]

Parks' previous career experience includes working as the assistant superintendent for school leadership for Ann Arbor Public Schools.[3]

School board

The Ann Arbor Board of Education is made up of seven members electedat large to four-year terms.[4]


Elections

See also:Ann Arbor Public Schools, Michigan, elections

Members of the Ann Arbor Board of Education are elected to four-year terms on a staggered basis. Each election is held in November of even-numbered years.[4]

Three seats on the board were up for general election and one seat was up for special election onNovember 5, 2024.


Ballotpedia covered school board elections in 367 school districts in 29 states in 2024. Those school districts had a total student enrollment of 12,203,404 students.Click here to read an analysis of those elections.


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Public participation in board meetings

The Ann Arbor Board of Education maintains the following policy on public testimony during board meetings:[5]

Public Commentary

Public commentary, typically scheduled near the beginning of all regular meetings of the board, shall be limited to an accumulated time of 45 minutes. At all other meetings of the board, excluding closed sessions, public commentary will be limited to 30 minutes. This limit may be extended at the discretion of the President.

Persons who wish to address the board, and have officially signed up for public commentary, shall be allowed to do so.

In-Person Meetings: Speakers must be present during the public commentary period for all meetings held in person; no write-in comments will be accepted for in-person meetings.

The Ann Arbor Board of Education will provide necessary and reasonable aids and services to individuals with disabilities by contacting the Ann Arbor Board of Education at boardofed@a2schools.org or 734-994-2232.

Electronic Meetings: Comments for sub-quorum meetings (i.e. committee meetings) held solely electronically must be submitted in writing and will be read aloud by AAPS staff within the timeframe allowed. Anonymous comments are not allowed.

The time limit for public commentary (45 or 30 minutes) will be evenly distributed among the number of speakers, and each speaker will be assigned an equal share of time in which to address the board. The maximum time for individual speakers will not exceed four (4) minutes. Exceptions to this time limit may be made at the discretion of the President, or through board action.

Those who wish to address the board during public commentary time must sign up at least 4 hours in advance of the meeting (i.e. by 3pm for a 7pm meeting) through the online Public Commentary Sign Up form.

Speakers will be placed on the public commentary list on a first-come, first-served basis and announced in that order. The list of speakers will be made public following public commentary time.

Speakers may not cede their time to others, and failure to speak will not increase the time allowed to other speakers. No speaker will be allowed to address the board more than once during the same meeting.

Each speaker should announce their name, community of residence, and whether they represent any organization or agency.

Speakers should take into account the rules of common courtesy and refrain from making personal attacks against employees, volunteers, students, parents, community members, or members of the board. If the comments constitute a complaint against an employee, the employee has the right to request a closed meeting. Speakers are encouraged to present complaints about a specific employee, board member, or student through proper channels established under board policy before requesting board consideration. At no time should a speaker reference a specific individual by name when speaking on an issue of concern involving personnel or students.

Members of the board and district employees will not answer questions during public commentary. However, previously stated board policies or administrative rules and regulations and corrections or clarifications to matters of fact may, be explained. A board member may, with the President's permission, ask a question of a speaker; otherwise, no dialogue is expected.[6]

District map

Budget

The following statistics were published by theNational Center for Education Statistics, which is a part of theU.S. Department of Education.[7]

Revenue, 2021-2022
SOURCEAMOUNTAMOUNT PER STUDENTPERCENT
Federal:$35,339,000$2,070 10%
Local:$208,408,000$12,209 56%
State:$127,538,000$7,471 34%
Total:$371,285,000$21,751
Expenditures, 2021-2022
TYPEAMOUNTAMOUNT PER STUDENTPERCENT
Total Expenditures:$384,901,000$22,548
Total Current Expenditures:$301,154,000$17,642
Instructional Expenditures:$177,977,000$10,426 46%
Student and Staff Support:$50,653,000$2,967 13%
Administration:$34,461,000$2,018 9%
Operations, Food Service, Other:$38,063,000$2,229 10%
Total Capital Outlay:$68,136,000$3,991
Construction:$55,409,000$3,245
Total Non El-Sec Education & Other:$5,507,000$322
Interest on Debt:$7,875,000$461


Teacher salaries

The following salary information was pulled from the district's teacher salary schedule. A salary schedule is a list of expected compensations based on variables such as position, years employed, and education level. It may not reflect actual teacher salaries in the district.

YearMinimumMaximum
2023-2024[8]$45,232$94,780
2022-2023[9]$44,345$92,178
2021-2022[10]$43,906$91,265

Academic performance

Each year, state and local education agencies use tests and other standards to assess student proficiency. Although the data below was published by theU.S. Department of Education, proficiency measurements are established by the states. As a result,proficiency levels are not comparable between different states andyear-over-year proficiency levels within a district may not be comparable because states may change their proficiency measurements.[11]

The following table shows the percentage of district students who scored at or above the proficiency level each school year:

School yearAll (%)Asian/Pacific Islander (%)Black (%)Hispanic (%)Native American (%)Two or More Races (%)White (%)
2020-2021718825-2950-54PS65-6973
2018-20196688264340-596375
2017-20185673224021-395564
2016-20176689244240-596375
2015-20166690294440-496275
2014-20156386274221-396070
2013-20146988334640-596775
2012-20136889334750-596475
2011-20126687314150-596373
2010-201191977383>=809295

The following table shows the percentage of district students who scored at or above the proficiency level each school year:

School yearAll (%)Asian/Pacific Islander (%)Black (%)Hispanic (%)Native American (%)Two or More Races (%)White (%)
2020-2021818740-4465-69PS80-8486
2018-20197083385240-596779
2017-20185767264321-395766
2016-20176882334940-596677
2015-20167085375060-696778
2014-20156781334640-596675
2013-20148289576560-798389
2012-20138188557060-698188
2011-20127988546070-798186
2010-201190947477>=809094

The following table shows the graduation rate of district students each school year:

School yearAll (%)Asian/Pacific Islander (%)Black (%)Hispanic (%)Native American (%)Two or More Races (%)White (%)
2019-202091>=9580-8475-79>=5085-8995
2018-201989>=9575-7975-79PS85-8994
2017-201889>=9575-7980-84>=5090-9491
2016-20179090-9480-8475-79>=5085-8993
2015-201689>=9575-7975-79PS85-8992
2014-201589>=9580-8480-84PS80-8489
2013-201489>=9575-7985-89>=5080-8492
2012-201387>=9575-7970-79>=5080-8489
2011-20128790-9470-7475-79PS85-8993
2010-20118490-9470-7475-79>=5070-7487


Students

YearEnrollmentYear-to-year change (%)
2023-202416,978-0.3
2022-202317,026-0.3
2021-202217,070-2.2
2020-202117,451-3.6
2019-202018,0730.1
2018-201918,0541.3
2017-201817,8201.4
2016-201717,5651.9
2015-201617,2332.7
2014-201516,7611.8
2013-201416,454-1.2
2012-201316,6540.1
2011-201216,635-0.8
2010-201116,7640.7
2009-201016,6460.7
2008-200916,523-1.3
2007-200816,742-1.3
2006-200716,952-1.2
2005-200617,1500.0
2004-200517,1562.7
2003-200416,701-0.4
2002-200316,7740.0
2001-200216,7721.4
2000-200116,5390.6
1999-200016,4340.0
Racial Demographics, 2023-2024
RACEAnn Arbor Public Schools (%)Michigan K-12 STUDENTS (%)
American Indian/Alaska Native0.10.6
Asian or Asian/Pacific Islander13.63.7
Black13.118.2
Hispanic10.89.2
Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander0.00.1
Two or More Races12.15.3
White50.363.0

Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the censushere.


Staff

As of the 2023-2024 school year, Ann Arbor Public Schools had 1,222.95 full-time classroom teachers. The student-teacher ratio was 13.88.

Teachers, 2023-2024 school year
TYPENUMBER OF TEACHERS
Prekindergarten:31.50
Kindergarten:86.00
Elementary:405.65
Secondary:538.10
Total:1,222.95

Ann Arbor Public Schools employed 47.10 district administrators and 64.90 school administrators as of the 2023-2024 school year.

Administrators, 2023-2024 school year
TYPENUMBER OF ADMINISTRATORS
District Administrators:47.10
District Administrative Support:15.40
School Administrators:64.90
School Administrative Support:149.86
Other staff, 2023-2024 school year
TYPENUMBER OF OTHER STAFF
Instructional Aides:341.10
Instruc. Coordinators & Supervisors:42.00
Total Guidance Counselors:43.50
Elementary Guidance Counselors:1.00
Secondary Guidance Counselors:42.50
Librarians/Media Specialists:32.00
Library/Media Support:1.00
Student Support Services:233.99
Other Support Services:411.49


Schools

Ann Arbor Public Schools operates 32 schools. They are listed below in alphabetical order.
List of schools
SCHOOL NAMENUMBER OF STUDENTSGRADES
Abbot School333KG-5
Angell School288KG-5
Ann Arbor Open At Mack School541KG-8
Ann Arbor Steam At Northside School599KG-8
Bach Elementary School322KG-5
Burns Park Elementary School497KG-5
Carpenter School408KG-5
Clague Middle School6616-8
Clifford E Bryant Comm School222KG-2
Community High School5099-12
Correctional Services49-12
Dicken Elementary School324KG-5
Eberwhite School368KG-5
Forsythe Middle School6126-8
Haisley Elementary School389KG-5
Huron High School1,6359-12
John Allen School402KG-5
Lakewood Elementary School266KG-5
Logan Elementary School374KG-5
Martin Luther King Elem School512KG-5
Mary D Mitchell School395KG-5
Pathways To Success Academic Campus2189-12
Pattengill School2293-5
Pioneer High School1,6839-12
Pittsfield School230KG-5
Scarlett Middle School6296-8
Skyline High School1,2719-12
Slauson Middle School7436-8
Tappan Middle School6406-8
Thurston Elementary School526KG-5
Uriah H Lawton School424KG-5
Wines Elementary School416KG-5

Contact information

Ann Arbor Public Schools logo.png

Ann Arbor Public Schools
2555 S. State St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Phone: 734-994-2200


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Education legislation in Michigan

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External links


Footnotes

  1. WEMU News, "Jazz Parks named Ann Arbor Public Schools interim superintendent ," November 9, 2023
  2. WEMU News, "Jazz Parks officially selected as Ann Arbor Public Schools' next superintendent," March 21, 2024
  3. WEMU News, "Jazz Parks named Ann Arbor Public Schools interim superintendent ," November 9, 2023
  4. 4.04.1Ann Arbor Public Schools, "Board Policies," adopted June 30, 2014
  5. Ann Arbor Public Schools, "AAPS Policies & Regulations: Participation at Board Meetings," accessed January 20, 2024
  6. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  7. National Center for Education Statistics, "Elementary/Secondary Information System," accessed October 6, 2025
  8. Ann Arbor Public Schools, "2023‐2024 AAEA TEACHERS," accessed January 31, 2024
  9. Ann Arbor Public Schools, "2021‐2022 AAEA TEACHERS," revised February 3, 2021
  10. Ann Arbor Public Schools, "2021‐2022 AAEA TEACHERS," revised February 3, 2021
  11. U.S. Department of Education, Washington, DC: EDFacts, "State Assessments in Reading/Language Arts and Mathematics- School Year 2018-19 EDFacts Data Documentation," accessed February 25, 2021
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