Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rootstown Rovers logo. The Rootstown Local School District is a secondary school district located in Rootstown, Ohio, United States.The district serves approximately 1,300 students in Rootstown Township in Portage County and has three schools: Rootstown Elementary School serving grades K-5, Rootstown Middle School serving grades 6–8, and Rootstown High School serving grades 9–12.
Previous home of the school from 1917–1966. Rootstown High School was established in 1884 and met in a small building adjacent to the town hall a few blocks south of the current campus. This building housed high school students and grade levels, though many students in the township attended smaller schoolhouses spread across 10 rural districts.
Rootstown was originally surveyed from the Western Reserve as survey township Town 2, Range 8 and was formally organized as a civil township in 1810 after previously having been part of Franklin Township. In 1821 the Rootstown Post Office was established. [8] It continues today under the ZIP Code Rootstown, OH 44272 and serves much of the ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
After making a season-high 11 3-pointers Wednesday, Rootstown has 102 this year, well ahead of last year's total of 63. The Rovers' 385 attempts also easily outpaces last year's total of 249.
A Meeting of the School Trustees by Robert Harris. A board of education, school committee or school board is the board of directors or board of trustees of a school, local school district or an equivalent institution. [1] [2] [3] The elected council determines the educational policy in a small regional area, such as a city, county, state, or ...
Rootstown remained undefeated, rallying from a halftime deficit to top Revere, 53-47, in Saturday's non-league girls basketball game. Abby White delivered a season-high 15 points for the Rovers (6 ...
The study found that 102 school districts had traditional town meeting, 64 had SB 2 meeting and 10 had no annual meeting. Because traditional-meeting communities tend to be smaller, only one third of the state's population was governed by traditional town meetings in 2002 and only 22 percent by traditional school-district meetings.