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Encyclopedia > Communications High School

Communications High School (CHS) is a career academy in the Monmouth County Vocational School District. CHS is located in Wall Township next to Wall High School. The school opened in 2000 with its first freshman class. Each year about 80 students enter the school. The first class graduated in 2004. The school currently has about 300 students. The Monmouth County Vocational School District is a vocational school district in Monmouth County, New Jersey serving the need to provide area students with relevant skills to implement technology and to develop as life-long learners. ...


The school has approximately 30 teachers. As of 2006, the principal is James R. Gleason. There are two guidance counselors and two school secretaries.


Some popular student activities include the CHS drama club, National Honor Society, Mock Trial club and the newspaper club, which produces the school newspaper Inkblot. CHS has no sports teams or official mascot. Instead, students are encouraged to participate in their home high school's sports. Started in 1921, the National Honor Society, or NHS, is an organization whose intent is to recognize middle and high school students in the United States. ... A mock trial (sometimes synonymous with moot court, although the activities are often different) is a contrived or imitation trial. ...

Communications High School in Wall Township, New Jersey
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Communications High School in Wall Township, New Jersey

Contents


Mission Statement

Communications High School, a small, personalized academy with a career focus, provides a theme-based integrated curriculum in conjunction with community and industry partnerships. Monmouth County students interested in the field of communications acquire knowledge, skills, and ethics in a unique and challenging educational environment[1].


Academics

Classes operate on block scheduling. Each day is divided into 4 class periods and a lunch/activity period. The classes run for approximately 90 minutes each. The lunch/activity period is placed between periods 2 and 3, and lasts for approximately 1 hour. Students eat lunch and participate in school clubs during that time period.


The school year is divided into two semesters. Students will attend a 5 credit class 5 times a week for one semester. Classes worth 2.5 credits will be attended every other day in one semester. Classes are rarely given for only one quarter of the year. Students who pass every class will acquire 40 credits each school year. Students must have 160 credits in order to graduate.


CHS requires that students explore many options during their first two years at the school. The only language offered at CHS is Spanish, and students must take at least 3 courses of the language. Students are required to take 4 years of math, english and science. Three years of history are required, and the senior year history class is an elective. Gym and Health classes are required every year, but seniors must fufill class requirements outside of the school setting.


Freshman and Sophmore Year

As freshman, students must take the communications classes Cisco Networking, Computer Applications, Digital Video Production, Understanding Mass Media.


As sophmores, students must take Journalism, TV/Audio Broadcasting and Visual Communications.


Junior and Senior Year

Junior year students must take the Enterprise Publishing class and can choose 2 electives. Electives include Animation, Intermediate Digital Video, Intermediate TV/Audio Broadcasting, Photojournalism, Programming in Java, Visual Communications II, and Web Design. Seniors can pick 3 electives. They may pick any of the junior year electives. They can also take advanced courses if they completed their junior-year counterparts. Senior year electives include Statistics, Spanish IV, Historical Issues in Film, Advanced Graphic Design, Character Animation, Advanced Journalism, E-Commerce, Game Programming, Electronic Field Production, or Talk Radio. Seniors must also pick between the Broadcast News class or the Advanced Digital Image Prep class. The senior year science requirement can be fufilled by either an Advanced Biology or Advanced Physics course.


Seniors are also required to take a mentorship class. For one quarter of the school year, students spend periods 3 and 4 at the mentorship site of their choice. Mentorship sites in the past have included the Asbury Park Press, Lab Volt, architectural firms, graphic design firms, and schools. The Asbury Park Press is the major daily newspaper in Monmouth and Ocean counties, New Jersey, and the second largest in the state. ...


External links

  • Communications High School
  • Monmouth County Vocational School District

  Results from FactBites:
 
History of Communications Arts High School (558 words)
Three members of the Taft High School faculty, James Buchanan, Sara McAndrew, and Baird Neville, were intrigued by the idea and worked with Ed Rawlinson, NISD deputy superintendent, Roger Harris, Taft principal, and the “founding partners” to make the vision a reality.
A “school-with-a-school” model was then studied, with Taft High School selected as the host school due to the expressed interest of the Taft administration and faculty.
The Communications Arts High School, as envisioned by the private sector “partners” and as embraced by Northside, differs from the district’s current magnets in several important ways.
A Day In The Life (404 words)
Tara Rose Stromberg works on her Macintosh computer during a CISCO networking class at the the Communications High School, which is run by the Monmouth County Vocational School District, next to Wall High.
Principal James Gleason, who seems to know almost all of the approximately 80 students there by name, says the Communications High School, which opened in the fall, is the fourth specialized high school or career academy in the Monmouth County Vocational School District.
Communications High is on a large campus on New Bedford Road.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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