Novi Community School District


Novi Community School District is a school district with its headquarters located in Novi, Michigan, USA in Greater Detroit. It operates eight schools.
The board of education includes a president, a vice president, a secretary, a treasurer, and four members. As of 2011 Dr. Steve Matthews is the district superintendent.

Rankings

In 1990 the district began offering the "Here Comes the Bus System," an invention which alerts parents that the school bus is within of the bus stop so that students do not have to wait for long periods of time at bus stops. Parents could pay $25 per year and a deposit in order to use the service. In the decade leading up to 2005, the school district's enrollment increased from 3,790 to 6,150 and the budget increased from $29 million to $60 million. Around 2005 district administrators anticipated that newly established housing developments in northern and western Novi would add 1,600 houses to the district. In 2005 the school district proposed giving random drug tests to students involved in all extracurricular activities.
In 2010, the Japanese School of Detroit, a supplementary educational institution that offers Japanese classes on Saturdays, announced that it was relocating to Novi. It entered into a 10-year agreement with the school district and began to use Novi Meadows Elementary School to conduct classes. It moved in the northern hemisphere summer of 2011. Superintendent Steve Matthews said that he expected for the Japanese population in the school district to increase due to the move of JSD.
After the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami occurred, the school district advised school staff to be sensitive to students who may have been affected by the disaster, as many of the district's students were Japanese or of Japanese descent.

Demographics

As of December 2010, the district has about 6,300 students. As of March 2011, of the student body, over 1,700 are Japanese American and Japanese national students. In December 2011 the district estimated that 5% of its students were Japanese nationals. As of 2015 Kazuyuki Katayama, the Japanese Consul General in Detroit, stated that he heard that there were 400 Japanese national students in the Novi school system.
Many parents of these students have jobs with automobile industry firms. Peter Dion, the superintendent, said in March 2011 that many of the Japanese students come to the Novi School District, attend the district for several years, and then move back to Japan. There are no full-time Japanese schools in Metro Detroit, so Japanese national students attend American schools.

Schools

NCSD owns and operates 8 schools, and is in the process of building its ninth.

High school