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Montgomery Village Middle School Montgomery Village: 773 Stedwick, Watkins Mill, Whetstone Neelsville Middle School: Germantown 815 Cabin Branch, Gibbs, South Lake, Stedwick Newport Mill Middle School: Kensington: 623 Highland, Oakland Terrace, Rock View North Bethesda Middle School: Bethesda: 1,110 Ashburton, Kensington Parkwood, Wyngate
North Bethesda Market East, formerly the tallest building in Montgomery County. North Bethesda is an unincorporated, census-designated place (CDP) in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, located just north-west of the U.S. capital of Washington, D.C. It had a population of 50,094 as of the 2020 census. [4]
The Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School, often referred to as CESJDS or JDS, is a private, pluralistic Jewish JK-12 school located on two campuses in North Bethesda (Rockville postal address), Maryland, United States. [4] [5] Founded in 1966, the school's namesake is Charles E. Smith, [6] a local Jewish philanthropist and real estate magnate.
Fort Bend Christian Academy (FBCA) is a private PK-12 Christian school with two campuses in Sugar Land, Texas in the Houston metropolitan area. [3] With two campuses, the North Campus houses upper school (9th - 12th Grade) while the South Campus houses lower school (PreK - 4th Grade) and middle school (5th - 8th Grade). [4]
Islamic Education Institute of Texas (Darul Arqam Schools) - the Spring Branch campus, Southeast Campus, and Southwest Campus, all K-8 schools, are in the Houston city limits [67] Its high school in north Harris County is outside of the city limits. Defunct. Mount Carmel High School; North Houston Baptist School
The demolition of Woodward High School / Tilden Middle School in April 2021 Charles Woodward High School is expected to open as its own high school in the 2027–28 school year. It was originally going to be 2025–26 school year but was pushed back to 2026–27 school year then it was pushed back again to 2027–28 school year and it might be ...
The school operates on trimesters. Students in grades 6–12 attend on average four classes per day. Upper School and Middle School students take five major academic courses per year – English, History, Language, Mathematics, and Science. Religion, art (visual and performing) and athletics are required at least one trimester per year.
The school is named after Saint Rose Philippine Duchesne, the first member of the Society of the Sacred Heart to come to America. The school is part of the Network of Sacred Heart Schools. The campus was built around a large oak tree, in the center of its campus. It became a symbol for the school because the name "Duchesne" is French for "of ...