Rosa Fort High School | |
---|---|
Location | |
| |
1100 Rosa Fort Dr, Tunica, MS 38676 United States | |
Information | |
Principal | Valarie Davis |
Staff | 37.47 (FTE) [1] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Enrollment | 447 [1] (2022–2023 [1]) |
Student to teacher ratio | 11.93 [1] |
Color(s) | Forest green and Vegas gold [2] |
Mascot | Lions |
Website |
www |
Rosa Fort High School (RFHS) is a senior high school in unincorporated Tunica County, Mississippi, [3] adjacent to the North Tunica CDP, [4] and near Tunica (with a Tunica postal address).
It is a part of the Tunica County School District, which includes all of Tunica County. [5]
After the rise of the gambling industry in the county in the 1990s, an influx of tax revenue went into the school system. [6] In 1990, according to a Fortune article about Tunica, one in three students at Tunica's high school graduated from high school. In 1991 no agency tracked graduation rates. According to the Fortune article, while "[m]ore kids are graduating from high school - there's no way to know for sure" whether a significant improvement had been made in the year 2007. [7] Despite the influx of tax revenue, the article argues, Rosa Fort High in 2007 was "a stubborn underperformer." [6] That year, it was ranked a "two" or "underperforming" in the State of Mississippi's five point scale. The article concluded that "Rosa Fort students aren't a whole lot better off academically than before the casinos arrived." [7] Ronald Love, who had been hired by the state in 1997 to supervise the Tunica school system, said "It is like Tunica suffers from a hangover from 100 years of poverty. There are vestiges of it everywhere: in education, in local politics, in the housing. And when you have been the poorest of the poor, well, an infusion of resources might lighten your load, but you still have the hangover." [7]
As of 2010 [update] 98% of the students were black. This differed from the private Tunica Academy (formerly Tunica Institute for Learning) a segregation academy founded in the desegregation period, where 97% were white. [8]
34°42′12″N 90°22′25″W / 34.7034°N 90.3736°W