San Mateo-Foster City School District | |
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1170 Chess Dr Foster City, California Foster City, California, San Mateo County, 94404 |
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Coordinates | 37°33′N 122°18.5′W / 37.550°N 122.3083°WCoordinates: 37°33′N 122°18.5′W / 37.550°N 122.3083°W |
District information | |
Type | Public |
Motto | Live, Lead, Learn |
Grades | K (TK) – 8 |
President | Audrey Ng |
Vice-president | Ed Coady |
Superintendent | Dr. Joan Rosas |
Schools | 20 |
District ID | 0634920 |
Students and staff | |
Students | 12,000 |
Teachers | 1,172 |
Staff | 413 |
Other information | |
Website | smfcsd |
San Mateo-Foster City School District is a school district in San Mateo and Foster City, California. It consists of twenty schools: three middle schools (Grades 6–8), fourteen elementary schools (TK/K–5), and three schools with all grades (K–8). With a total enrollment of approximately 12,500 students (in 2015–16), it is the largest school district in San Mateo County. Students in the San Mateo-Foster City School District continue on to the San Mateo Union High School District.
Measure L was passed in February 2008, and provided funds to modernize and repair schools in the district.
Measure P was placed on the November 2013 ballot, but failed to pass. Measure P would have funded capital programs to add a fifth grade to Bowditch Middle School and reopen Knolls Elementary, but debates on Measure P exposed a rift between Foster City and San Mateo residents who felt that Measure P provided disproportionate benefits to the smaller Foster City. Final voting showed support for Measure P in Foster City was outweighed by opposition in San Mateo.
Measure X was passed in November 2015, and committed to:
The school at Charter Square is anticipated to be completed in early 2019 at an estimated (in 2016) cost of US$61,000,000 (equivalent to $62,200,000 in 2017). After Measure P failed to pass, Measure X was written with input from an eight-member committee which held nearly 100 public meetings from 2014 to 2015 to come up with recommendations to increase district capacity while maintaining equal opportunities for all students. Rather than reopen Knolls Elementary, Measure X included the creation of a new elementary school at College Park, drawing students from the surrounding North Central neighborhood. The current elementary school at College Park, which had served neighborhood children prior to its conversion to a Mandarin-language immersion school, had a history of poor academic performance.
Measure Y, proposing an extension of an existing parcel tax which generated $7 million annually, failed to reach the two-thirds supermajority required to pass in an all-mail ballot held in March 2017.
One of the schools is Bowditch Middle School. It has 6th, 7th, and 8th graders. Bowditch was named after Nathaniel Bowditch and consists of more than 1,000 students. There is a principal, and two assistant principals. Bowditch is a big school, with more than 40 classrooms. They are more commonly known as the Buccaneers, and have an orchestra, band, soccer, flag football, track and more.