Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
George Washington Carver Center for Arts and Technology, also known just as the Carver Center is a Baltimore County-wide public magnet high school originally established in 1992 as one of three geographically spread technology high schools, (others established earlier in 1970 were Western and Eastern Technical High Schools - [original names]).
Capital Preparatory Magnet School (Capital Prep) Magnet: Hartford: Hartford County: Capitol Region Athletic League: Trailblazers: Cedarhurst School: Private (Therapeutic) Hamden: New Haven County: N/A: N/A: 7th through 12th grades Bridgeport Central High School: Bridgeport Public Schools: Bridgeport: Fairfield County: FCIAC: Hilltoppers
The high school cost $125.8 million to build, making it the most expensive school in the state of Connecticut at the time. [2] Since it is a magnet school, the state taxpayers paid $119 million of the costs. The school was built on both Trumbull and Bridgeport's land, but the campus was later given to Bridgeport. [3]
Carver Engineering and Science, which is operated by the School District of Philadelphia, handles grades 7 through 12.Carver Engineering and Science is a magnet school with a curriculum that specializes in science and technology, including a middle school program with 60 spaces for 8th grade and 60 spaces for 7th grade.
Sword played high school basketball for George Washington Carver High School in Montgomery. His senior year, Sword led his team to the 6A state championship was named Alabama Mr. Basketball. Sword was listed as 4-star recruit by Rivals.com, and choose to attend Mississippi State over offers from Alabama, Auburn, and Georgia. [1]
The school mascot is the Trojan. The campus was originally Carver School, and housed grades 1–12. Later it was Coffee Junior High. Then the junior high was split into two middle schools, and this campus became East Coffee Middle School, housing grades 6–8. In the fall of 2007 it acquired the name Coffee High School Freshman Campus.
The school was founded in 1947 by the Chicago Public Schools district [6] as George Washington Carver Area High School, a neighborhood high school.Carver was established to accommodate high school-age residents of the Chicago Housing Authority's Altgeld Gardens Homes public housing complex, which opened in the area west of the school's location in 1944.
Walter Luckett, star high school and college player in the 1970s; Wes Matthews, played ten seasons in the NBA; Frank Oleynick, played two years for NBA in Seattle [18] Charles D. Smith, University of Pittsburgh and New York Knicks; Chris Smith, University of Connecticut and Minnesota Timberwolves [19] Harper Williams, basketball player [20]