Marysville Joint Unified School District
- MARYSVILLE, CA
School District
Marysville Joint Unified School District
- MARYSVILLE, CA
- Rating 3.97 out of 5 58 reviews
Report Card
- Academicsgrade C+
- Diversitygrade A
- Teachersgrade B
- College Prepgrade B
- Clubs & Activitiesgrade C minus
- Health & Safetygrade B minus
- Administrationgrade B
- Sportsgrade C+
- Foodgrade C
- Resources & Facilitiesgrade D+
editorial
About
Marysville Joint Unified School District Rankings
Niche ranks nearly 100,000 schools and districts based on statistics and millions of opinions from students and parents.
Map
Elementary Schools in Marysville Joint Unified School District
Middle Schools in Marysville Joint Unified School District
High Schools in Marysville Joint Unified School District
- grade A
Marysville Charter Academy for the Arts
- Rating 4.09 out of 5 81 reviews
- grade B
Marysville High School
- Rating 3.57 out of 5 167 reviews
- grade B minus
Lindhurst High School
- Rating 3.54 out of 5 345 reviews
- grade C+
South Lindhurst Continuation High School
- Rating 4.67 out of 5 6 reviews
- grade unavailable
Marysville Community Day
Academics
Percent Proficient - Reading
38%
Percent Proficient - Math
27%
Average Graduation Rate
85%
Average SAT
1070
242 responses
Average ACT
22
54 responses
Popular Colleges
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Students
Diversity
grade A
Based on racial and economic diversity and survey responses on school culture and diversity from students and parents.
Students
9,969
Free or Reduced Lunch
80%
Teachers
Student-Teacher Ratio
23:1
National
17:1Average Teacher Salary
$83,829
Teachers in First/Second Year
14.1%
Finances
Expenses Per Student
$12,239 / student
National
$12,239- Cost of Livinggrade C
- Good for Familiesgrade C
- Housinggrade C minus
Median Household Income
$44,839
National
$62,843Median Rent
$933
National
$1,062Median Home Value
$207,200
National
$217,500Marysville Joint Unified School District Reviews
Rating 3.97 out of 5 58 reviews
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Marysville High School is not the most luxurious place to go to school. It’s not the infrastructure that makes going to this school average, it’s the attitude of the students. We have a very low school participation rate and that takes away from the high school experience. Nowadays there are so many restrictions put on us that we can’t do. For example we can’t even sell food during school for fundraisers and we can’t even have a culture day. Academically there’s not a lot of options. It would be nice to have more options for classes. This school can change for the better I know it! It just needs some motivation and positivity.
My school district is so diverse. From my school (MCAA) to Foothill, a small school in a rural area, there is something for everyone. I enjoy seeing familiar faces from Foothill, MHS, and MCAA when I ride the bus in the morning. My school has opportunities. More than the average high school. It offers everything from Martial arts, to Adv Strings. The teachers have done an amazing job creating a fun virtual experience for us. Overall, I would say the district does a good job creating an amazing learning environment. I would change my districts limited sports electives. Though exeling in creative and art based electives, they offer no sports elctives. Another thing I would change is the food. The donuts they hand out in the morning are either frozen or raw enough to shape back into dough. It would also be appreciated if the district provided lunches for kids with allergies. If you are allergic to something at my school, you just don't get lunch.
I attended Marysville Joint Unified School District from the time I was in kindergarten until I graduated high school. The teachers I had while in my younger formative years were all very good teachers. They inspired a passion for education, excelling, and for helping. There was always fun activities to get the children interested and excited about learning. The tone for my education was set immensely by the teachers I had in my younger years because they were big in my life. I greatly admired them and they inspired me to want to be like them. In my intermediate years the teachers I had were very vigorous and they taught me a great deal with their advanced approaches. Questions and further divulging were always encouraged. The teachers did lack the empathy and capacity to assist struggling students once I was in middle school and began to fall behind in areas. As I advanced to high school this did not change. Teachers at the high-school level did not care about the individual anymore.