Calvary Chapel Christian Schools Murrieta

Calvary Murrieta Christian Schools (CMCS) is a private preschool to 8th grade (9th to 12th grade (1993-2019) Christian school education system in Murrieta, California[1] which was founded by the Calvary Chapel of Murrieta Church. The school is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC 7-12) and the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI 7-12). CMCS also holds membership in the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI) and California Interscholastic Federation (CIF).

Calvary Murrieta Christian Schools
MottoEquipping for Today and for Tomorrow
TypePrivate
Established1993
AffiliationChristian
Location, ,
33°34′17″N 117°12′46″W
ColorsRoyal Blue, Black and White
AthleticsCIF - Southern Section: South Valley League
NicknameCMCS
AffiliationsACSI
WASC
MascotWarrior
Websitewww.cmcsweb.com

Athletics

Junior High

  • Boys Football (8-Man)
  • Girls Volleyball
  • Coed Cross Country
  • Cheer
  • Boys Baseball
  • Girls Softball
  • Boys Basketball
  • Girls Basketball
  • Coed Soccer
  • Coed Golf
  • Coed Track

High school

  • Boys Football (11-Man)
  • Girls Volleyball
  • Coed Cross Country
  • Cheer
  • Girls Soccer
  • Boys Soccer
  • Girls Basketball
  • Boys Basketball
  • Boys Baseball[2]
  • Girls Softball
  • Coed Track
  • Boys Volleyball
  • Coed Golf

Arts

Music

  • Jazz Band
  • Intermediate Band
  • Symphonic Band
  • Warrior Pep Band
  • Show Choir

Theatre Arts

  • Introduction to Drama
  • Advanced Drama
  • Theatre Productions

Visual Arts

  • Ceramics
  • Fine Art
  • Journalism/Yearbook
  • Photography
gollark: Windows ALSO has proprietary drivers?
gollark: Nvidia uses their drivers for market segmentation i.e. the simultaneous transcodes limit.
gollark: > whats wrong with proprietary drivers... well, they can break randomly and you can't do much about it, they might be unsupported, they have limited options.
gollark: Yes, which is a problem.
gollark: No wayland compatibility and such.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.