Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
La Plata High School is part of the Charles County Public Schools and is located in La Plata, Maryland, United States. The current school was built in 1979. The current school was built in 1979. Before that, it was in the building (built in 1964) which now holds Milton M. Somers Middle School.
The school board will have 1 at-large member, 2 members from each commissioner district (8 total), and 1 voting student member. The student member gained a vote in all matters except capital and operating budgets, personnel decisions, and a few other minor exclusions.
La Plata (/ l ə ˈ p l eɪ t ə / lə-PLAY-tə) [3] is a town in Charles County, Maryland, United States. The population was 10,159 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ] It is the county seat of Charles County.
Dr. Michelle CarneyRay-Yoder will start as Central Regional's superintendent as of Jan. 1. 2024. She will replace former Superintendent Triantafillos "Tommy" Parlapanides, who resigned in February ...
The school had also been designated a science, mathematics, and technology magnet school for a number of years prior to the relocation. LaReine High School was shuttered in 1992 and stood unoccupied until the school was reopened as a public middle school. Dr. Jesse L. Freeman Jr. was then principal at Francis Scott Key, who died in 1994.
Williamsville-6 vs. Aquinas Institute-5, at Webster Schroeder HS, 1 p.m. Section 8 (to be determined Tuesday) vs. Section 11 (to be determined Tuesday), at Shoreham-Wading River HS, 11 a.m.
The La Plata Campus is home to 14 buildings and houses a bookstore, conference center, a fine arts center with a 400-seat auditorium, computer laboratories, a distance learning center, a library, and a fitness center. [9] The Southern Maryland Studies Center, a regional archives repository and research center, is located in the CSM library. [10]
The school originally was a junior/senior high school. The area of the county when Milford opened its doors in 1949 was mostly rural. In the early and mid 1950s, the school became overcrowded, forcing the county to build a separate junior high (Sudbrook; grades 7-9)and the renamed high school dropped the "Junior" from its name.