The Beaverton School District (BSD 48J) is a school district in and around Beaverton, Oregon, United States. It serves students throughout Beaverton, Hillsboro, Aloha, and unincorporated neighborhoods of Portland, Oregon. The Beaverton Elementary School District 48 was established in 1876, with other elementary districts later merged into the district. The elementary district was later merged with the high school district (10J) to create a unified school district. It is the third-largest school district in the state, with an enrollment of 39,180 students as of 2022. For the 2022âÂÂ23 school year, the district had a total budget of $622.8 million.
The district employs over 2,100 teachers at its 34 elementary, nine middle, and six high schools as well as several option schools. Mountainside High School, the district's sixth high school, opened in 2017. Tumwater Middle School (previously Timberland), the district's ninth middle school, opened in the fall of 2021.
District 48 was established in 1876 as the "Beaverton Elementary School District", serving grades 1âÂÂ8. In July 1960, the elementary district, as well as the Aloha-Huber #107, Barnes #57J, Cedar Mills #62J, Cedar Hills, Cooper Mountain #94, Garden Home #92, Hazeldale #60, McKay #18, McKinley #81, Raleigh #95 (composed of the Raleigh Hills and Raleigh Park elementary schools), and Sunset Valley #6 elementary school districts merged with the Beaverton High School District 10 to create one unified school district. The district has followed the trends throughout the US, establishing schools for 7thâÂÂ9th grades in the mid-1960s (to make a 6-3-3 system) and then in 1994 moving 6th grade into middle school and 9th grade back into high school to form the current 5-3-4 configuration.
The Beaverton School District's school-age population grew by 44% in the 1990s, but by only 14% in the 2000s. The median age in the district increased from 33.3 in 2000 to 35.3 in 2010. The total population of the area under the district's jurisdiction was 253,198 as of the 2010 census.
From March 2020 to March 2021, all students were instructed remotely either through online learning or through comprehensive distance learning. Return to in-person instruction began in April, 2021 with a hybrid model. About half of the district's students chose in-person hybrid instruction with the rest choosing to continue comprehensive distance learning
The district's service area in Washington County includes almost all of Beaverton, portions of Hillsboro and Tigard, all of the census-designated places of Cedar Hills, Garden HomeâÂÂWhitford, Marlene Village, and Oak Hills, and portions of the census-designated places of Aloha, Bethany, Cedar Mill, Metzger, Raleigh Hills, Rockcreek, and West Slope.
The district extends into Multnomah County, where it includes a small portion of Portland.
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Enrollment numbers are for 2022âÂÂ23 school year.
<nowiki>**</nowiki>Springville and Raleigh Hills were previously KâÂÂ8 schools, with a choice for students in grades 6âÂÂ8 to remain but were transitioned to KâÂÂ5 in the 2023âÂÂ24 school year. AlohaâÂÂHuber Park remains a K-8 for dual language immersion students.
The Beaverton School District operates nine middle schools housing 6th, 7th, and 8th grades. Prior to the 1994âÂÂ95 school year they housed students in grades 7âÂÂ9, as a part of the district's 6-3-3 plan established in the 1960s.
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Enrollment numbers are for 2022âÂÂ2023 school year.
High schools in Beaverton are part of the 6A-2 Metro League for interscholastic athletics and activities. The newest, Mountainside High School, opened in September 2017 for freshmen and sophomores. As a result, the district began planning to alter its high school boundaries. The boundary changes were approved in June 2017 and went into effect at the beginning of the 2017âÂÂ18 school year.
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Enrollment numbers are for 2022âÂÂ23 school year.
The current Beaverton School District superintendent is Dr. Gustavo Balderas, since July 1, 2022.
In the 2009 school year, the district had 1114 students classified as homeless by the state's Department of Education, or 3.0% of students in the district. By 2010, the number of homeless students had grown to 1,580, the highest of any school district in the state.
The following are the district's teacher/student staffing ratios (KâÂÂ5 numbers have been updated for the 2019âÂÂ20 school year):
All information below is as of October 1, 2014.