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New Egypt High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school that serves students in ninth through twelfth grades from Plumsted Township in Ocean County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, operating as the lone secondary school of the Plumsted Township School District.
Dr. Gerald H. Woehr Elementary School [14] with 538 students in grades PreK-5 Walter Therien, principal; Middle school. New Egypt Middle School [15] with 294 students in grades 6-8 Andrea Caldes, principal; High school. New Egypt High School [16] with 375 students in grades 9-12 Fred Geardino, principal
Schools in the district (with 2019–20 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics [101]) are Dr. Gerald H. Woehr Elementary School [102] with 538 students in grades Pre-K–5, New Egypt Middle School [103] with 294 students in grades 6–8 and New Egypt High School [104] with 375 students in grades 9–12. [105] [106 ...
New Jersey's public school students are experiencing high chronic absenteeism and discipline issues, according to data from the 2022-23 school year.
Students from Plumsted Township had attended the district's high school as part of a sending/receiving relationship with the Plumsted Township School District prior to the passage of a referendum under which New Egypt High School was opened in September 2001 with an initial class of 100 students in ninth grade. [8]
St. Joseph High School (Metuchen, New Jersey), Metuchen; St. Peter the Apostle High School, New Brunswick; St. Thomas Aquinas High School (New Jersey), Edison (renamed from Bishop George Ahr High School in 2019) Timothy Christian School (New Jersey), Piscataway; Wardlaw-Hartridge School, Edison; Yeshiva Tiferes Naftoli, Jamesburg
New Egypt is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) [9] located within Plumsted Township, in Ocean County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] [ 12 ] As of the 2010 United States Census , the CDP's population was 2,512. [ 13 ]
Despite laws promoting school integration since 1881, a 2017 study by the UCLA Civil Rights Project found that New Jersey has the sixth-most segregated classrooms in the United States. New Jersey has substantially smaller school districts per capita than other states, effectively dividing attendance by municipality. As a result, the proportion ...