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This page was last edited on 11 October 2023, at 11:03 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A Louis Armstrong Middle School redirect to Queens, New York is weak enough as it is, but it is even weaker considering there are other Louis Armstrong Middle Schools in the world just as significant as that one. It sees wrong that the weak redirect is based on one school while any others are simply ignored.
Indianapolis is served by 11 public school districts, along with a number of public charter and private schools. Indianapolis also has eight local universities. Higher education IUPUI is the city's largest higher education institution by enrollment. Institutions Indianapolis is home to more than a dozen public and private colleges and universities. The "‡" symbol denotes university branches ...
Richard Goodall came back to Indiana late Wednesday, ran errands on Thursday and was back to work at 6 a.m. Friday, where he received a warm welcome. ... TERRE HAUTE — Photos of school heroes ...
Shortridge High School closed in 1981, and reopened as a middle school in the late 2000s, and now serves as a traditional high school. John Marshall High School closed in 1987 after just eighteen years of service. It later reopened as a middle school in 1993, and in 2008 was converted a high school before returning as a middle school in 2016.
A teenager who opened fire at a central Indiana middle school in 2018, wounding another student and a teacher, should go to a residential treatment center, a judge ordered Monday. Hamilton ...
The Metropolitan School District of Lawrence Township is a school district in Lawrence Township in northeast Marion County, Indianapolis, Indiana. It covers an area of 48 square miles (120 km 2 ) and in 2010 had a student enrollment just under 16,000.
It includes one high school, three intermediate/middle schools, nine elementary schools, one pre-school (The Early Childhood Center), and one alternative school for at-risk students of middle-school and high-school age (The Renaissance School). The district has achieved an 86% graduation rate and over 74% progression to post-secondary education.