Wikipedia:
Rockville High School(Maryland) |
Rockville High School (RHS) is a comprehensive, four-year high school in Rockville, Maryland, United States. The school opened in 1968 and currently serves 1253 students [1]. Earle B. Wood Middle School is the feeder school for Rockville High School.
The student newspaper, The Rampage, was the National Winner in the "High Times" magazine for the 2005 Student Publishing Awards, established by the Association of Educational Publishers (AEP) and sponsored by TIME magazine [2].
The original building underwent renovation starting in the 2002-2003 school year, and was almost completely finished by the start of the 2004-2005 school year. During the two years of renovation, RHS students attended school in Northwood High School; this was before Northwood's recent re-opening.
Rockville High School is the only school in Montgomery County that has a bagpipe band; the band originated at nearby Robert E. Peary High School in 1961 and moved to RHS when Peary High closed in 1984.
School Administrators
- Dr. Debra Munk, Principal
- Mr. Bennie Green, Assistant Principal
- Mrs. Dyan K. Gomez, Assistant Principal
- Mr. Daniel Garcia, Student Support Specialist
Notable School Organizations
- The Rockville High School Pipe Band
- Echoes Literary Magazine
- National Honor Society (NHS)
- Student Government Association (SGA)
- WRAM-TV, live school television feed
- Friends of Rockville Music (FORM), a booster club for the music department
- Black Leaders in Action (BLIA)
- Inspiration for People of Color (IPC)
- WRAM Radio, live school radio broadcast
- RHS Theatre
- Rockville Model United Nations (RockMUN)
- Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD)
- It's Academic
- Whiffle Ball Team
- Fire Blast Club-Dedicated to the survival of pokemon
External links
- Official Site
- Bird's eye view of the previous building architecture
- Alumni Site
- Earle B. Wood Middle School
- The Rampage
- The Rockville High School Pipe Band
- Friends of Rockville Music
- RHS Theatre
- WRAM Radio
| High Schools |
|
Albert Einstein | Bethesda-Chevy Chase | Blake | Winston Churchill | Clarksburg | Damascus | Gaithersburg | Walter Johnson | John F. Kennedy | Magruder | Montgomery Blair | Northwest | Northwood | Paint Branch | Poolesville | Quince Orchard | Richard Montgomery | Rockville | Seneca Valley | Sherwood | Springbrook | Wootton | Whitman | Watkins Mill | Wheaton |
| Technical High Schools |
| Middle Schools |
|
A. Mario Loiederman | Argyle | Benjamin Banneker | Briggs Chaney | Cabin John | Col E. Brooke Lee | Earle B. Wood | Eastern | Forest Oak | Francis Scott Key | Lakelands Park | Gaithersburg | Hoover | Poolesville | John T. Baker | Julius West | Kingsview | Martin Luther King | Montgomery Village| Neelsville| Newport Mill| North Bethesda| Parkland | Redland | Ridgeview| Robert Frost| Roberto W. Clemente| Rocky Hill| Rosa M. Parks| Shady Grove| Silver Spring International| Sligo| Takoma Park| Pyle| Tilden| Westland| White Oak| William Farquhar |
| Primary Schools |
| Alternative Schools And Special Education |
|
Alternative Programs | Carl Sandburg Center | Longview | Mark Twain | McKenney Hills | Regional Institute For Children & Adolescents | | Rock Terrace | Stephen Knolls |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)

