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Indian Prairie School District 204 (abbreviated IPSD) serves roughly 27,400 students from the Illinois communities of Aurora, Bolingbrook, Plainfield and Naperville, in DuPage and Will counties. [2] Currently, one preschool, twenty-one elementary schools, seven middle schools, four high schools, and one alternative high school are in the district.
The school serves Indian Prairie School District 204. The namesake of the school, Robert E. Clow, was the School Board President of District 40. Mr. Clow was a member of a prominent family who owned and operated farms in the region. [6]
Serving Indian Prairie School District 204, and opened for the 2009–2010 academic year for freshman and sophomore classes (grades nine and ten), Metea Valley cost $124.7 million to build, and can hold 3,000 students. [8] The school met its full enrollment of students for grades 9-12 during the 2011–2012 academic year.
Illinois – Naperville – Neuqua Valley High School, Indian Prairie CUSD 204. Illinois – Naperville – Scott Elementary School, Naperville CUSD 203.
Neuqua Valley is the counterpart to Waubonsie Valley High School and Metea Valley High School, in Indian Prairie School District 204. Classrooms can be rented for other district approved teachers to use after school.
Indian Prairie Community Unit School District #204 (a unit district K-12) was formed in the fall of 1972. [4] In December 1972 a referendum was passed to build and equip a high school at a projected cost of $8.2 million. A separate issue also passed to add a swimming pool. Construction on Waubonsie Valley High School began in the spring of 1973 ...
Serving Indian Prairie School District 204, and opened for the 1981 academic year for 6th, 7th and 8th grade classes, Hill Middle School can hold 915 students. [4] The school's colors are red and blue, and the school's mascot is the 'Trailblazer'. The namesake of the school, Thayer J. Hill, was a prominent educator in the Naperville, Illinois ...
Here’s what garden and patio plants you can save for next spring. As the temperatures start to drop and sweater weather arrives, you may start to look sadly at your beautiful, lush garden plants.