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For girls, the sports are basketball, bowling, cross country, field hockey, lacrosse, tennis, indoor and outdoor track, and volleyball. [1] In some sports, there are no group championships. In these sports — all schools, public and non-public alike — compete for a single state championship. For boys, the sports are fencing and golf.
The Greater Middlesex Conference is an athletic conference comprising 34 public and private high schools located in the greater Middlesex County, New Jersey area. The league operates under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. There are both competitions in Middle and High school levels.
Despite the failure of a referendum to pay for a new Branchburg high school, the Branchburg district decided that it wanted to terminate the relationship, even after Somerville had reconsidered its decision. Branchburg filed a petition in 1975 with the New Jersey Department of Education seeking to terminate the send/receive agreement. [8]
Midland School, or Midland, is a coeducational, nonsectarian, and non-profit special education school located in North Branch (within Branchburg Township), Somerset County, New Jersey. The school provides education from pre-kindergarten to twelfth grade and supports students in their future academic and professional development.
Branchburg is a township in Somerset County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the township's population was 14,940, [9] [10] its highest decennial census count ever and an increase of 481 (+3.3%) from the 2010 census count of 14,459, [18] [19] which in turn had reflected a decline of 107 (−0.7%) from the 14,566 counted at the 2000 census.
Get the Branchburg, NJ local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
Branchburg's Storming Robots' Team JAM Sessions, consisting of Aditi Gopalakrishnan, Julia Chan and Maya Baireddy (left to right), earned second place at this year's international RoboCup Junior ...
The New Jersey Juvenile Justice Commission operates the New Jersey Training School, a juvenile detention center for boys, in the township. [103] In 2018, the state approved funding to close the two Civil War-era youth prisons in New Jersey. It has not been decided yet what will be done with the property after its closure. [104]