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North Johnston High School serves an area composed of several small communities and towns: Glendale-Chapel, Kenly, Micro, and Pine Level. These communities had their own local schools until the consolidated NJHS opened in 1965.
The National Junior Honor Society (NJHS) was established by the National Association of Secondary School Principals in 1929. The NJHS was established "to create enthusiasm for scholarship; to stimulate a desire to render service; to promote leadership; to encourage responsible citizenship; and to develop character in the students of secondary schools."
Merging the records between these organizations has been left to the independent publication Track and Field News (T&FN) primarily in the person of Robert Hersh, who also supervises records for USA Track and Field (USATF). Starting in the 1970s, many community colleges began recruiting foreign born athletes.
The 2023 high school track season may have been the most successful ever in the history of the sport in the Wichita Falls area. Last year, athletes in the TRN Sports coverage area brought home 27 ...
In 1929, the NHS furthered its reach by introducing the National Junior Honor Society (NJHS) for middle school students. This expansion was complemented in 2008 with the creation of the National Elementary Honor Society , a collaboration between the NASSP and the National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP), aimed at elementary ...
NJHS may refer to: National Junior Honor Society; New Jersey Historical Society; North Johnston High School, North Carolina, United States; New Jewish High School, now known as the Gann Academy; Nepal Journal of Health Sciences, a publication of the Madan Bhandari Academy of Health Sciences
The school is named after Dr. Luther Porter Jackson an established historian and educator. The mascot is a tiger and the school colors are red and black/white. The school has transitioned into a GT Center school to reduce overcrowding at Joyce Kilmer Middle School and Robert Frost Middle School. The school converted into an AAP center school.
As of the 2023–24 school year, the school had an enrollment of 849 students and 81.6 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 10.4:1. There were 2 students (0.2% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 1 (0.1% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch. [2]