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In 2006, Quince Orchard High School was the 456th highest-rated school according to Newsweek magazine ' s list of the top 1,300 high schools in the United States. [6] In 2014, Quince Orchard was ranked the sixth best high school in the state of Maryland and 176th in the United States by U.S. News & World Report on their list of best high ...
James Hubert Blake High School: Silver Spring 1,784 Banneker, Briggs Chaney, Farquhar, Key, White Oak Winston Churchill High School: Potomac: 2,234 Cabin John, Hoover Clarksburg High School: Clarksburg: 2,251 Rocky Hill, Wells Damascus High School: Damascus: 1,414 Baker, Wells Thomas Edison High School of Technology: Silver Spring 558 ...
In 1984, the Montgomery County Council voted to build Quince Orchard High School in order to reduce crowding at Gaithersburg High School, and it allocated $20 million for its construction in 1984. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] The school was expected to have 1,680 students upon opening, and it was designed to have a capacity of 2,000 students. [ 8 ]
Public high school students in North Potomac attend either Thomas S. Wootton or Quince Orchard high schools. [74] Quince Orchard High School is located at the intersection of Quince Orchard Road and Darnestown Road, placing it on the northwest side of the North Potomac CDP. [75] [Note 2] Wootton High School is located in Rockville, on the east ...
Northwest High School: Germantown: Scott E. Smith Jaguars Northwood High School: Silver Spring: Jonathan L. Garrick Gladiators Paint Branch High School: Burtonsville: Shawaan T. Robinson Panthers Poolesville High School: Poolesville: Mark A. Carothers Falcons Quince Orchard High School: Gaithersburg: Elizabeth L. Thomas Cougars Rockville High ...
Quince Orchard may refer to: Quince Orchard, Maryland, an unincorporated area and neighborhood of Gaithersburg, Maryland; Quince Orchard Road, part of Maryland Route 124; Quince Orchard High School, a high school on Quince Orchard Road
Northwest High School has sports rivalries, particularly in football, with neighboring Seneca Valley High School, and Quince Orchard High School. The annual football game between Northwest and Seneca Valley is known as "The Battle for the King's Trophy" or the "Battle for Germantown".
The Downcounty Consortium choice process allows students to request certain high schools to attend. The students rank high schools by preference, which is often related to the school's academies. They are then entered into a lottery system that assigns students' schools based on factors such as preferences, capacity and socio-economic status.