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  2. School assembly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_assembly

    A school assembly is a gathering of all or part of a school for various purposes, such as special programs or communicating information. [1] In some schools, students may to perform a common song or prayer, receive announcements, or present awards.

  3. Freedom of speech in schools in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_speech_in...

    Board of Education of Weedsport Central School District, holding the school was within its rights in suspending for a semester a middle school student who used as an online avatar an image suggesting he intended to shoot and kill one of his teachers, due to the threat of violence involved and the likelihood that threat would eventually reach ...

  4. Homeroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeroom

    A homeroom, tutor group, form class, or form is a brief administrative period that occurs in a classroom assigned to a student in primary school and in secondary school. Within a homeroom period or classroom, administrative documents are distributed, attendance is marked, announcements are made, and students are given the opportunity to plan ...

  5. Homecoming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homecoming

    The parade includes the school's marching band and different school organizations’ floats created by the classes and organizations and most of the sports get a chance to be in the parade. Every class prepares a float which corresponds with the homecoming theme or related theme of school spirit as assigned by school administrators.

  6. Chautauqua - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chautauqua

    Chautauqua was considered wholesome family entertainment and appealed to middle classes and people who considered themselves respectable or aspired to respectability. Vaudeville, on the other hand, was widely considered vulgar babbitry, and appealed to working-class men. There was a stark distinction between the two, and they generally did not ...

  7. Convocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convocation

    The Convocations of Canterbury and York were the synodical assemblies of the two Provinces of the Church of England until the Church Assembly was established in 1920. [2] Their origins date back to the end of the seventh century when Theodore of Tarsus (Archbishop of Canterbury, 668-690) reorganized the structures of the English Church and established a national synod of bishops.

  8. Deliberative assembly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deliberative_assembly

    A member of a deliberative assembly has the right to attend meetings and make and second motions, speak in the debate, and vote. [10] Organizations may have different classes of members (such as regular members, active members, associate members, and honorary members), but the rights of each class of membership must be defined (such as whether ...

  9. General Students Assembly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Students_Assembly

    It is the supreme decision-making body of the Association (union of students), comprising all members of the club and take decisions by majority vote after an open debate on the issues. Every faculty has its own assembly, for example: General Student Assembly of the Faculty of History, General Student Assembly of the Faculty of Mathematics.