Are Williamson County TN Schools closed tomorrow?
Closings/Delays No closings are listed at this time.
Is there school in Franklin County Tennessee tomorrow?
Schools will be closed all day. All afterschool and evening activities are canceled unless otherwise announced. This includes all practices, contests, games, matches, meets, events, facility rentals, etc.
What school district is Franklin TN in?
Williamson County schools
| District Name: Williamson County schools for this district | NCES District ID: 4704530 |
|---|---|
| Mailing Address: 1320 W Main Franklin, TN 37064 | Physical Address: 1320 W Main Franklin, TN 37064 |
| Type: Local school district | Status: Open |
| Supervisory Union #: N/A | Grade Span: (grades PK – 12) PK KG 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 |
How many schools are in Franklin County TN?
11
| District Name: Franklin County schools for this district | NCES District ID: 4701290 | State District ID: TN-00260 |
|---|---|---|
| Mailing Address: 215 South College St Winchester, TN 37398 | Physical Address: 215 South College St Winchester, TN 37398 | Phone: (931)967-0626 |
| Type: Local school district | Status: Open | Total Schools: 11 |
How many students go to Franklin High School Tennessee?
1,757
Franklin High School is a public high school located in Franklin, Tennessee, United States. The school serves the north central section of Williamson County for students in grades 9–12….Franklin High School (Tennessee)
| Franklin High School | |
|---|---|
| Address | |
| Enrollment | 1,757 (2019-2020) |
| Student to teacher ratio | 17.89 |
| Color(s) |
How do Williamson County schools rank nationally?
With a Rank Score of 0.941, WCS is the highest ranked district in Tennessee and ranks fourth in the nation (compared with other public school districts with more than 10,000 students and first in the nation compared with districts with more than 20,000 students).
Who is the mayor of Franklin County Tennessee?
David Alexander, County Mayor.
Are TN schools going virtual?
Tennessee grants seven districts permission to switch to virtual learning — for all of their individual schools. The Tennessee Department of Education has granted permission this week for at least seven districts to pivot all of their schools to virtual learning for up to five days due to issues related to COVID-19.