Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Grades 3-5. Central Intermediate School; Grades 1-2. Tanglewood Elementary School By 2015 the school had temporary classrooms for first and second grade students. [6] By 2016 Tanglewood Elementary had been damaged by a summertime flood; it was the only Central public school damaged by the floodwaters even though the event affected much of Central. [10]
Under racial segregation, Southern University students majoring in education were not allowed to gain practical teaching experience, as Student Teachers, in East Baton Rouge Parish. Practical teaching experience and passing the teaching examination were required to teach in any East Baton Rouge Parish school, black or white.
It was the first school in Louisiana to offer degree programs in nursing and business education. NSU, along with numerous other state colleges, gained university status in 1970 during the administration of President Arnold R. Kilpatrick, a Northwestern State alumnus who served from 1966 to 1978.
The school began with students from kindergarten to sixth grade in 1981, adding grades 7–12 in 1983. PBS is now divided into three administrative units: Parkview Baptist Elementary School (K-4), Parkview Baptist Middle School (5-8), and Parkview Baptist High School (9-12). Grade 5 was moved to be part of the middle school in fall 2008.
Benjamin Franklin High School; Booker T. Washington High School; Cohen College Prep High School; Collegiate Academies (Abramson Sci Academy, Collegiate Baton Rouge, G. W. Carver, Livingston, Opportunities, Rosenwald) Delores Taylor Arthur School for Young Men; Dr. King Charter School; Edna Karr High School; Eleanor McMain Secondary School; G. W ...
Forest Heights Academy of Excellence is an academic/visual & performing arts magnet school located on Sumrall Drive and is part of East Baton Rouge Parish Public Schools. As of 2008 it is a National Blue Ribbon school. [citation needed] The school serves students in Kindergarten through Fifth Grade.
In 1973, Baptist Christian University was founded by Jimmy G. Tharpe (1930–2008) as part of the Baptist Tabernacle, offering distance education for full-time ministers to complete degrees without leaving their pastorates. [2] In February 1993, the trustees restructured the school's charter and changed the name to Louisiana Baptist University.
West Baton Rouge Parish School Board operates area public schools. Holy Family School (of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge) is a local private Catholic school for grades pre-K through Eight. It opened on September 5, 1949 with 146 students in Kindergarten through grade 3, with it becoming K-5 in 1950, and with one grade level per ...