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As of the 2022–23 school year, the district, comprising 12 schools, had an enrollment of 9,690 students and 777.4 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.5:1. [ 1 ]
The Greater Middlesex Conference is an athletic conference comprising 34 public and private high schools located in the greater Middlesex County, New Jersey area. The league operates under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.
The New Brunswick Public Schools sought to prevent the shift of 280 students who would have attended high school in New Brunswick from attending the new facility, arguing that the withdrawal of the almost entirely white students from North Brunswick and Milltown would leave the New Brunswick school with an overwhelmingly black student body. [6]
The realignment by the NJSIAA has garnered very mixed reactions among the high schools that it would affect. [6] For instance, Eastside High School, which has traditionally been beaten handily in athletic competition, endorses the move. [6] Meanwhile, Summit High School has enjoyed great success in their conference and sees no need to part ways ...
By 1876, a high school principal earned a yearly stipend of $500.00. [10] In 1893, New Brunswick Supreme Court Justice John James Fraser was commissioned by Lieutenant-Governor Samuel Leonard Tilley to investigate complaints related to the "School Law or Regulations" in Gloucester County. Some Protestant ratepayers were very concerned that the ...
Watercolor drawing of the former Saint John High School building (1897-1932) The following contains lists of schools in the Canadian province of New Brunswick into public school, private schools, and former school categories. New Brunswick has four Anglophone school districts and three Francophone school districts: Anglophone North School ...
Last year, close to 26,000 students took the exam with just over 4,000 offered a seat. Of that, 4.5% of offers went to Black students and 7.6% to Latino students, according to city data.
Five of South Brunswick's schools have been named as a "Star School" by the New Jersey Department of Education, the highest honor that a New Jersey school can achieve: Cambridge Elementary School in the 1993-94 school year, [9] Dayton Elementary School in the 1993-94 school year, [10] Indian Fields Elementary School in the 1993-94 school year, [11]