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Rosa M. Parks Middle School Olney 848 Belmont, Greenwood, Olney John Poole Middle School: Poolesville: 443 Monocacy, Poolesville Thomas W. Pyle Middle School: Bethesda 1,241 Bannockburn, Bradley Hills, Burning Tree, Carderock Springs, Wood Acres Redland Middle School Rockville 571 Cashell, Resnik, Sequoyah Ridgeview Middle School: Gaithersburg 751
Cashell Elementary School was also selected as a 2014 National Blue Ribbon School. Other elementary schools serving Olney include Olney Elementary School, Belmont, and Sherwood. Middle schools include William Farquhar and Rosa Parks.
With 210 schools, it is the largest school district in the state of Maryland. [1] [3] For the 2022–23 school year, the district had about 160,554 students taught by about 13,994 teachers, 86.4 percent of whom had a master's degree or equivalent. [1] MCPS receives nearly half of the county's budget—47% in 2023. [4]
Brookeville is now part of the Montgomery County Public Schools system, and is served by Sherwood High School, which first opened in 1883 as a Friends school and became a public school in 1909. [47] Most of Brookeville, including the town proper, is located in the service area for Rosa Parks Middle School and Greenwood Elementary School.
The Rosa Parks Institute or Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development, a youth organization in Detroit, Michigan; Rosa L. Parks Scholarship Foundation, a foundation in Michigan; Rosa Parks Middle School, a school in Montgomery County, Maryland; Rosa L. Parks School of Fine and Performing Arts, a high school in Paterson, New Jersey
The school was formed as Washington Christian School in 1960 for grades K-4. WCS grew gradually, and in 1982 it leased a larger building from the county on Franwall Avenue in Silver Spring, which allowed it to add a middle school and offer instruction through the eighth grade. WCS expanded again in 1996 when it merged with the nearby Silver ...
The Graham and Parks School is a public elementary school in Cambridge, MA. Founded in 1981, the school was originally conceived as an "alternative school" aligned with the progressive education movement. It historically emphasized project-based learning, teacher-led curriculum development, and parent involvement in all aspects of school operation.
He was a school commissioner for the Montgomery County School Board from 1859 to 1860 and served as its first president [1] from 1860 to 1868. He was also a county surveyor, civil engineer, president of the Sandy Spring Lyceum from 1872 to 1873, and one of the original directors of the Mutual Fire Insurance Company from 1848 to 1885.