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The district is an Anglophone district operating 39 public schools from grades Kindergarten to 12 in Albert and Westmorland counties. The name of the school district was changed from School District 2 in July 2012. [4] Enrollment for 2020-2021 is at approximately 16,145 students and 2,500 staff. Anglophone East School District is headquartered ...
Salisbury Regional School. / 46.024892; -65.040686. Salisbury Regional School is a public school located in Salisbury, New Brunswick, Canada. Formerly named JMA Armstrong High School/Salisbury Middle School. Established in 1981, the school is part of the Anglophone East School District, serving students from grades 5 - 12.
The school is represented by the colours maroon and white, its motto being "Pride in Ourselves, Pride in our School, Pride in our Community". Harrison Trimble High School was named after a civic-minded board Trustee who showed foresight by acquiring the parcel of land on behalf of the district, at a time when the area was mostly pasture ...
Caledonia Regional High School is a Canadian secondary school in Hillsborough, New Brunswick. It is a “Centre of Academic Excellence” according to the local news media and the least populated high school in all of Anglophone East School District . Caledonia Regional has approximately 270 students enrolled in grades 6 through 12.
Founded in 1975 [8] as a trade school, Bernice MacNaughton originally accommodated 1,400 students. It became the MacNaughton Science & Technology Center (MSTC) in 1994 but was reestablished as a high school in 1999, consisting only of grade nine students. [7] 2003 saw the first graduating class of BMHS. MacNaughton underwent an extensive multi ...
The Anglophone South district is the second largest public school district in the province, with a 2022–2023 enrollment of 23,661, along with approximately 1,796 educators. [1] ASD-S has 69 public schools ranging from kindergarten to twelfth grade levels. [3] Anglophone South is headquartered in Saint John. [4]
Additionally, multiple school district councils implemented their own policies to reverse the policy's changes. [67] [68] Following pressure from the education minister, some school districts reached an agreement on their policy revisions, while other districts, such as Anglophone East and Francophone Sud , stood firm with their own versions. [69]
New Brunswick has four Anglophone school districts and three Francophone school districts: Anglophone North School District (ASD-N) Anglophone South School District (ASD-S) Anglophone East School District (ASD-E) Anglophone West School District (ASD-W) Francophone Nord-Est School District (DSFN-E)