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The area is served by the Tomorrow River School District, known as TRSD or TR Schools, which consists of a pre-K-12 school system in a single 160,000 sq. ft. building in Amherst. The building is separated into three sections, Amherst Elementary (pre-K through 5th grade), Amherst Middle School, or AMS (6th-8th grades), and Amherst High School ...
The Eau Claire Area School District (ECASD) is a school district in western Wisconsin and the eighth-largest district in the state. [3]Covering approximately 200 square miles (520 km 2), it includes the city of Eau Claire, part of Altoona, parts of the village of Lake Hallie, the towns of Brunswick, Clear Creek, Drammen, Pleasant Valley, Rock Creek, Seymour, Union, Washington, and Wheaton, and ...
Teaching staff: 28.84 (FTE) [1] Grades: ... Amherst High School is a public high school located in Amherst, Wisconsin. It serves grades 9 through 12 & is the only ...
Leonardo Da Vinci School for Gifted Learners in Green Bay has been named Wisconsin’s best middle school, according to U.S. News & World Report’s 2025 rankings.. The publication analyzed 23,861 ...
Gloria Ladson-Billings is an American pedagogical theorist and teacher educator on the faculty of the University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Education. She is known, among other things, for her groundbreaking work in the fields of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy and Critical race theory .
The name Amherst was established in 1853 by Adam Uline, after General Jeffery Amherst of Revolutionary fame and the fact he was native of Amherst, Nova Scotia. [7] The first known settler of Amherst was John F. Hillstrom, who arrived in 1851, while John and A. P. Een follow closely behind, arriving in August 1852.
Natalie “Samantha” Rupnow, a 15-year-old student, killed two people, injured six others, and took her own life during a shooting in Wisconsin, USA, on Monday (December 16). Court records ...
The Tomah Indian Industrial School, which opened in 1893, was an off-reservation, government boarding school in Wisconsin located along a main railroad that connected Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul. It provided education for children from the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin, who were referred to at the time as the “Winnebago" by white settlers ...