Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chesapeake Public Schools (CPS), also known as Chesapeake City Public Schools, is the school division that administers public education in the United States city of Chesapeake, Virginia. The superintendent is Dr. Jared A. Cotton. On July 27, 2020, the division school board voted a 100% online start to the 2020–21 school year.
In the new school calendar, DepEd Order No. 3, series of 2024 dated February 19, 2024 “adjusted end of the school year (SY) shall be May 31, 2024.” It urged schools to conduct all end-of-school-year rites from May 29 to 31, as the school break is set from June 1 to July 26 and the start of the SY 2024-2025 is set for July 29 which will then ...
The Southeastern District is a district of the Virginia High School League.The schools in the Southeastern District compete in the 6A, 5A, and 4A divisions. The members of the Southeastern District are all the public high schools in Chesapeake City and Suffolk City.
The board approved the calendar for the 2024-25 school year in August. School will begin next year on Aug. 26 and end June 10, 2025. Like the proposed calendars, there are a total of 177 ...
Chesapeake High School (CHS), is a four-year public high school located in Essex, Maryland, United States, a suburb of Baltimore. It is part of the Baltimore County Public Schools system. Chesapeake High School is one of two high schools in Maryland by that name, the other one being located in Anne Arundel County.
Students and teachers return to school Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2024. For spring break, students will have Friday, March 29, 2024 off through the following week. They will return Monday, April 8, 2024.
The school moved to its current location on Great Bridge Boulevard and Tiger Drive in Chesapeake's Greenbrier section in 1994. After the move the school kept its old name, and the Rodgers Street building became Oscar F. Smith Middle School. Therefore, Oscar Frommel Smith is the only person to be the namesake of two Chesapeake schools.
On October 27, 2023, Cecil County Public Schools alerted affected fine arts teachers their programs may be cut the following school year because the county executive was developing a budget that would slash CCPS funding, in turn cutting funding for the Fine Arts to the minimum required by Maryland law.