Kalkaska Public Schools is a public school district in Kalkaska County in Northern Michigan. It serves Kalkaska and the townships of Blue Lake, Kalkaska, and Oliver. It also serves parts of the townships of Bear Lake, Clearwater, Cold Springs, Excelsior, Garfield, Orange, and Rapid River, and Springfield.
Kalkaska's school burned down in March 1943 and was replaced with a new building the next year.
The current Kalkaska High School was built around 1960.
In 1993, the school district gained national attention when it ended the 1992âÂÂ93 school year in March, 10 weeks ahead of schedule, due to bankruptcy. This was the first instance in recent memory of a Michigan public school district closing early rather than cutting programs.
The district's revenue crisis led to a public outcry for reform and contributed to the passage of Proposal A in 1994, which changed Michigan's public school funding mechanisms. The district ultimately recovered financially. It finished $19 million in additions and renovation projects around 2013.
Fully encompassed by the boundary of Kalkaska Public Schools is the independent school district Excelsior Township School District 1, whose only school is a frame one-room schoolhouse called Crawford School. It has two teachers and houses grades kindergarten through eight. While many rural school districts in Kalkaska County with one-room schoolhouses consolidated with Kalkaska Public Schools over the years, voters in Excelsior Township School District No. 1 chose to stay independent because they felt their students would receive more personalized attention and they took pride in the well-maintained historic school building. After graduating from the school, students attend Kalkaska High School or Forest Area High School.
Most of the district's schools share a campus in Kalkaska, and the district also operates an elementary school in Rapid City.