All schools in the DoDDS system operate outside of the
states of the United States and the
District of Columbia. There are also some schools that operate on military installations within the United States, but those are grouped in a separate organization within DoDEA, the Department of Defense Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary Schools (DDESS). DoDDS has superintendents for two districts: Europe and Pacific. The DoDDS Pacific schools are, for the most part, in the
Far East on installations in
South Korea and
Japan. Schools on military bases in
Guam are under DDESS jurisdiction, but are administered by DoDDS Pacific (presumably for administrative convenience).
Turkish DoDDS schools are served by the European branch. Schools on the
Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in
Cuba fall under the jurisdiction of DoDDS, but are administered by DDESS. Schools on bases in
Puerto Rico are under DDESS. Although the schools are primarily for dependents of military personnel,
U.S. government employees are allowed to enroll their children in the schools on a space-available basis. As all of these schools are situated overseas, a concerted effort is made to immerse the children in the local culture. Language and culture courses are offered as early as elementary school, while advanced language courses and opportunities to intimately view the culture of the student's host nation are offered throughout high school. DoDDS schools operate with two structures in terms of grade levels: • The old American standard, in which elementary schools run from
kindergarten to sixth grade while high school serves seventh through twelfth graders. • A newer standard, adopted by some DoDDS facilities in the 1970s, in which kindergarten to 3rd-5th grade students attend
elementary school, post-elementary students up to 8th grade attend
middle school, and 9th through 12th graders attend
high school. As a result of
IDEA 2004, students with special education disabilities attend schools within DoDDS. These students are in pre-K (preschool or early childhood) through high school. The infants-toddlers special education program exists overseas on U.S. military bases, though not coordinated through DoDDS. School psychologists are directly employed by DoDDS and civilian employed
clinical child psychologists are employed by the U.S. military to provide direct and indirect services to students with special needs. Not all levels of special education services are available at all schools and base locations. DoDDS range from kindergarten to 12th grade, and some universities are accredited by the Department of Defense. In addition to operating retail facilities on overseas military installations, the Army & Air Force Exchange Service provides four million school lunches each year in overseas Department of Defense schools at a break-even expense to support military families. ==Environmental changes==