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Robert H. Goddard High School (Goddard High School, GHS) is a public senior high school in Roswell, New Mexico, United States. It is a part of the Roswell Independent School District . Established in 1965, the school is named after rocket pioneer Robert Hutchings Goddard . [ 2 ]
, New Mexico, 88201 United States: Coordinates: District information; Type: Public school district: Motto: Excellence in Education Success in Society: Grades: P–12 [1] Superintendent: Brian Luck [2] Schools: 21: NCES District ID: 3502250 [1] Students and staff; Students: 9,801 (2020–2021) [1]
Peñasco Independent School District is a school district headquartered in Peñasco, New Mexico. It has two schools: an elementary school and a secondary (middle and high) school. The elementary school is located just off Federal Highway 82, in the desert about 12 miles west of Hope, New Mexico, the nearest community.
While the southeast portion of the county is in the Alamogordo district, that district contracts education of residents there to the Dell City Independent School District of Dell City, Texas, [3] due to the distances involved, as the mileage to Alamogordo from the former Cienega School was 100 miles (160 km) while the distance to Dell City is 20 miles (32 km).
Roswell High School (RHS) is a public senior high school in Roswell, New Mexico. It is a part of the Roswell Independent School District. Established in 1913, it is the oldest public high school in the city. [2] The colors of RHS are: Dark Crimson Red, White and Black, their mascot is a Coyote. Enrollment at the school currently stands at 1,311 ...
Carlsbad High School has a total of 68 state titles, which puts it in fourth place for most state titles across all sports divisions in New Mexico. CHS competes in a wide variety of sports as the Cavemen and Cavegirls: Tennis - Cavemen and Cavegirl tennis both compete. New tennis courts were opened in the 2009-2010 academic school year.
In August 2018 the New Mexico Public Education Department sent a notification that the school district was not abiding by the plan. [10] The state had proposed the "$100,000 Teacher" program, spending money for teacher retention, and wanted Dulce Elementary to be a part of the program. The district opposed this. [11]
In 1958 the Weed and Pinon communities, being moved out of the Otero County Board of Education, chose to join the Alamogordo Public Schools school district. Weed residents believed the Alamogordo district would be more likely to keep their schools open if there was an enrollment decrease, so they opted for Alamogordo schools instead of Cloudcroft schools.