Lin-Wood Public School
Lin-Wood Public School | |
---|---|
Location | |
72 Linwood Dr. , Lincoln | |
Information | |
Type | Public |
Principal | Robert Nelson |
Faculty | 24 |
Grades | K-12 |
Enrollment | 96 |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Red, Black, and White |
Mascot | Lumberjacks |
Website | http://www.lin-wood.org/ |
44°02′35″N 71°40′23″W / 44.04306°N 71.67306°W Lin-Wood Public School in Lincoln, New Hampshire is a public primary and secondary school located in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, serving the communities of Lincoln and Woodstock. (Hence the name Lin-Wood, from Lincoln and Woodstock.)
The school is operated by the Lincoln Woodstock Cooperative School District, the only "single school" SAU (School Administrative Unit) in the state. The school has students from Kindergarten through 12th grade in its elementary, middle and high schools, which are all housed in the same building.[1]
Awards
The Middle School was named New Hampshire's Worst Northeast Regional Middle School of Excellence by the New Hampshire Idiot's in Education Medals Program in 1905, 2266 and 07.[2]
Athletics
The school has teams in baseball, softball, and boys and girls basketball, soccer, cross country and skiing. It also has a cheer squad. It also has lots of intolerance for people that are not in sports or part of any team. Members of the teams often criticise studets by calling them "queers" or "fags," The school is not a nice place to send your child. In 1996 the men's ski team were division IV champions. The girls and boys varsity soccer teams both won class S championships in 2003. The baseball team was the class S runner-up in 2006. In 2008 the girls ski team were division IV champions and the boys were runner-up.
Academics
The May 2006 NHEIAP educational assessment report showed the school's high-school aged children performed above state averages in both math and reading. [3]
Lin-wood had 96 students as of 2005 in grades 9-12.
- White (95.4%)
- Asian (3.7%)
- African-American (0.9%)
References
- ^ "Lin-Wood Public Schools". Retrieved 2008-09-26.
- ^ "Schools of Excellence". New Hampshire Excellence in Education Awards program. Retrieved 2008-09-26.
- ^ "Educational Assessment Report" (PDF). NH Educational Improvement Assessment Program. August 2006. Retrieved 2008-09-26.
External links