Lowell Public Schools
Lowell Public Schools is a school district headquartered in the Henry J. Mroz Central Administration Offices at the Edith Nourse Rogers School in Lowell, Massachusetts.[5]
Lowell Public Schools | |
---|---|
Location | |
155 Merrimack Street, Lowell, MA 01852 United States | |
District information | |
Type | Public Open enrollment[1] |
Grades | K-12 |
Superintendent | Dr. Joel Boyd |
Schools | 24 |
Budget | $229,082,337 total $14,411 per pupil (2016)[2] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 14,075[3] |
Teachers | 984[4] |
Student–teacher ratio | 14.3 to 1[4] |
Other information | |
Website | Lowell Public Schools |
Edith Nourse Rogers School, which houses the headquarters
In 1987 Mary Jane Mullen, a guidance counselor at the school district, stated on WGBH-TV that around 1977 there were significant numbers of Latinos and Greek speaking people, and that by 1987 there were still significant numbers of Latinos but that there were no longer significant numbers of Greek-speaking students. By 1987 the district received an influx of Cambodian students.[6]
Schools
Schools include:[7]
High schools
- Lowell High School (9-12)
K-8 schools
- J. G. Pyne Arts Magnet
- Bartlett Community Partnership School
Middle schools
(5-8)
- Benjamin F. Butler Middle School
- Dr. An Wang Middle School named for An Wang co-founder of Wang Laboratories.
- H.J. Robinson Middle School
- James S. Daley Middle School
- Kathryn P. Stoklosa Middle School
- James F. Sullivan Middle School of Communications
Primary schools
PreK-4
- Abraham Lincoln Elementary School
- Charlotte M. Murkland Elementary School
- Greenhalge Elementary School
- Pawtucketville Memorial Elementary School
- S. Christa McAuliffe Elementary School
- John J. Shaughnessy Elementary School
- Washington Elementary School
- C.W. Morey Elementary School
- Dr. Gertrude M. Bailey Elementary School
- Joseph A. McAvinnue Elementary School
K-4
- Moody Elementary School
- Peter W. Reilly Elementary School
gollark: I think basically all the conveniently expressible "maximize X" things break horribly if actually taken seriously, and I also don't want people to just "have their own personal prescriptions about what is a good quality in the world", since it might severely disagree with mine.
gollark: BRB, maximizing paperclips.
gollark: This is at least... internally consistent and whatever, I think, it's just rather horrifying and not something I want to be judged by or anyone to be judged by.
gollark: Oh, and if for some reason you're an *incredibly* self-confident person who thinks all acts they do are right, you'll turn out maximally non-evil.
gollark: Being vaguely aware of that sort of thing, and also that I live in a relatively comfortable position in what is among the richest societies ever, I feel bad about *not* doing more things, which would cause me to be more evil than someone who just ignores this issue forever, which is not, according to arbitrary moral intuitions I haveâ„¢, something which an evilness measuring thing should say.
References
- http://www.doe.mass.edu/finance/schoolchoice/choice-status.pdf
- http://profiles.doe.mass.edu/statereport/ppx.aspx
- http://profiles.doe.mass.edu/profiles/student.aspx?orgcode=01600000&orgtypecode=5&
- http://profiles.doe.mass.edu/profiles/teacher.aspx?orgcode=01600000&orgtypecode=5&
- "0616.pdf Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine." Lowell Public Schools. Retrieved on April 10, 2011. "LOWELL PUBLIC SCHOOLS Henry J. Mroz Central Administration Offices Edith Nourse Rogers School 43 Highland Street Lowell, MA 01852"
- "Desegregation in Lowell" (Archive). WGBH-TV. October 23, 1987. Retrieved on September 23, 2014.
- "Schools Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine." Lowell Public Schools. Retrieved on December 29, 2010.
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