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Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Bowman Gray campus. The Wake Forest School of Medicine has one campus on the Bowman Gray Campus in the Ardmore neighborhood of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and a second campus downtown which opened in July 2016. Founded in 1902, the School of Medicine directs the education of about 1,800 students and ...
Articles and categories related to schools affiliated with Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina Pages in category "Wake Forest University schools" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Middle Creek High School: 9–12 Traditional Cary 920495 North Wake College and Career Academy: 9–13 Early College Wake Forest 920518 Panther Creek High School: 9–12 Traditional Cary 920526 Phillips High School: 9–12 Traditional Raleigh 920528 Rolesville High School: 9–12 Traditional Rolesville 920546 SCORE Academy: 9–12 Traditional ...
In 2025, Wake is opening Felton Grove High School in Holly Springs. The district will also open Bowling Road Elementary in Fuquay-Varina, Pleasant Plains Elementary in Apex and Rex Road Elementary ...
The 10 Wake County finalists for 2023 Teacher of the Year are (pictured starting top left, clockwise) Jane Ferguson of Brooks Elementary, Terry Hennings of Garner High, Sarah Freeman of Wake ...
Wake Forest may refer to: Wake Forest, North Carolina, a town near Raleigh, North Carolina; Wake Forest University, a university founded in the above town and now located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina Wake Forest School of Medicine, the university's medical school; Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, a hospital affiliated with the university
Wake has not interpreted the new state law’s wording about supplementary material as applying to school library books. Third graders search for books during the WAKE Up and Read event in Garner ...
The Wake Forest School of Business Administration was founded in 1949 by Professor Gaines M. Rogers, with seven or eight full-time faculty, and offering two degrees: B.S and B.B.A. In 1968 Rogers resigned as dean of the school, and was replaced by Harvard finance professor Robert S. Carlson, who instituted the school's first MBA program.