Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Frederick High School's graduation rate has been steady over the past 12 years. In 2007 the school graduated 92.75%, the highest rate since 1993 when it reached 93.35%, up from a low of 90.65% in 2004. The AP participation rate at Frederick High is 40 percent. The student body makeup is 51 percent male and 49 percent female.
Frederick Douglass High School (formerly Western High School building (1927-1955) Edmondson / Westside High School Reginald F. Lewis High School Mergenthaler Vocational-Technical High School Patterson High School Baltimore Polytechnic institute Western High School
Four Frederick County public schools are certified as Maryland Green Schools as administered by the Maryland Association for Environmental and Outdoor Education. Frederick County Public Schools was also the 1st Maryland school district to adapt a goal to increase tree canopy on all properties from 12% to 20% over the next thirty years.
Douglass high school, as of 2007, had 1,151 students, of which 52% were female. African American students made up 99% of the total student population with 53% qualifying for free lunch. The school has 59 teachers for a 1:20 teacher per pupil ratio. [10] The breakdown of students per grade was: Grade 9 - 491 students; Grade 10 - 233 students
Calvert High School (Prince Frederick, Maryland) Cambridge-South Dorchester High School; Carver Vocational-Technical High School; Catoctin High School; Catonsville High School; Centennial High School (Howard County, Maryland) Central High School (Maryland) Century High School (Sykesville, Maryland) Charles Herbert Flowers High School
The Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association (MPSSAA) is the association that oversees public high school sporting contests in the state of Maryland. [2] Formed in 1946, the MPSSAA is made up of public high schools from each of Maryland's 23 counties and independent city of Baltimore, which joined the association in 1993 when its public high schools withdrew from the earlier ...
A "Negro" / "Colored" (now African-American) elementary school was authorized in 1867, after a long controversy and public demand by the free black population of the, supplemented in 1883 by a "Colored High School" - second oldest in the nation next to Dunbar High School in Washington, D.C. [citation needed] Baltimore's new secondary school for ...
Pages in category "Schools in Frederick County, Maryland" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .