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Anglophone East School District is a Canadian school district in South-East New Brunswick. The district is an Anglophone district operating 38 public schools from grades Kindergarten to 12 in Albert and Westmorland counties. [5] Notably, Havelock School is on the border of Kings County and Westmorland County.
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)
Bernice MacNaughton High School runs on a two-semester arrangement. Most courses run on a full-semester basis, but some grade nine specialty courses (e.g. physical education, visual arts) are half-semester courses.
Anglophone South was created by merging districts 6, 8, and 10. Anglophone East was previously known as district 2. Anglophone North was created by merging districts 15 and 16. [7] Francophone Sud was created by merging districts 1 and 11. Francophone Nord-Ouest was previously known as district 3. Francophone Nord-Est was created by merging ...
Riverview High School, or simply known as RHS, is a public high school in Riverview, New Brunswick, Canada. [6] It is part of the province's Anglophone East School District, offering education to students from grade nine to twelve. It is the only high school in Riverview, and one of four Anglophone high schools in Greater Moncton .
Formerly named JMA Armstrong High School/Salisbury Middle School — The name was changed in 2022 to just Salisbury Regional School after motion passed from AESD District Education Council. Established in 1981 [4] , the school is part of the Anglophone East School District , serving students from grades 5 - 12 .
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, thereby saving the school district a lot of money when time came to build.
In 2015, the Anglophone East School District held a council meeting addressing the potential closure for the school, which local residents campaigned against citing concerns such as the lengthy busing distance to the closest alternative in Hillsborough. The council unanimously voted to continue running the school.