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The Nashua School District is a school division serving the students of Nashua, New Hampshire.The current Superintendent of the district is Dr. Mario Andrade. As of 2020, the District Board of Education members are: Heather Raymond, Chair; Raymond Guarino, Clerk; Jennifer Bishop, Jessica Brown, Sharon Giglio, Paula Johnson, Dorothy Oden, Gloria Timmons, and Sandra Ziehm.
In 2011, the Follett School and Library Group was created to serve the K–12 market under one business group. Strategic business decisions were made to move the focus of the school and library group into the K–12 classroom, and in 2011, certain assets of Follett's public library business, BWI, were sold.
On September 28, 2017, ten years after opening for their first year, the school won the National Blue Ribbon Schools award. [14] In the 2023-2024 school year, the Academy for Science and Design opened at their new location at 9 Townsend West in Nashua after a delay of 3 weeks, due to fire safety concerns, on the 18th of September.
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Nashua High School South, formerly known as Nashua Senior High School, is a public high school located in Nashua, New Hampshire. The school's current location was erected in 1975 with its first class graduating in June 1976. The school was remodeled between 2002 and 2004 when a second school, Nashua High School North, was built. The existing ...
Bishop Guertin High School: Nashua: Hillsborough: Bow High School: Bow: Merrimack: ... High School Towns – NH Dept. of Education list of public high schools and the ...
Nashua: Nashua: 42 – Nashua (Pre-K to 12) Nelson: Nelson 29 – Keene (Pre-K to 12) New Boston: New Boston 19 – Goffstown (Pre-K to 12) New Castle: New Castle 50 – Greenland (Pre-K to 12) New Durham: Governor Wentworth Regional 49 – Governor Wentworth Regional (Pre-K to 12) New Hampton: Newfound Area: 4 – Newfound Area (Pre-K to 12 ...
In the 2012–2013 school year, the district had 658 students. All except 15 (2.3%) students were non-Hispanic origins. There were two Hispanic students, making up .3% of the total student body. 126 students were eligible for free lunches and 90 students were eligible for reduced priced lunches, both indicators of poverty; combined these students made up 32.8% of the student body.