

Register online with Educere select the appropriate course number and Sussex County Technical School Code VTQ8I7Q2. The mission of our school is to provide an environment that. All courses are self-paced, though students must complete them by the designated end date. Frankford Township School provides educational services for children in grades Pre-K through 8. Half and quarter year abbreviated courses must be completed within 30 days of the student's start date, but no later than August 25, 2023 by 11:59pm, EST.

End Date: Abbreviated courses must be completed within 60 days of the student's start date, but no later than August 25, 2023 by 11:59pm, EST. Start Date: Approximately 7 days after receipt of registration and payment. Review course selections with your Counselor. The Sparta Public Library is not part of the county system and should be contacted directly for information about internet availability and other services. Please feel free to contact the following number for further assistance: 97 x3418. (In particular, some of the databases may be helpful to students doing research)
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Parents may wish to connect to the library's website directions, maps, and additional information about services. Franklin School still serves the Borough, educating the children of Franklin on the hilltop beside the oak tree.ĭONATED BY FRANKLIN ALUMNI AND STUDENTS, AND THE FRANKLIN HISTORICAL SOCIETY, IN FRANKLIN BOROUGH AT THE SCHOOL'S 100TH CELEBRATION, SEPTEMBER 19, 2015Ĭoordinates on Google Maps: 41.117270, -74.Each building has a limited number of computers for public use. Several generations of students - parent and child - have gone from kindergarten through 12th grade in this same building this was the last K-12 school as such in New Jersey, changing when Wallkill Valley Regional High School opened in 1982 for grades 9-12. Increased population required expansion in 1922, in 1926 with a high school, and again in 1960, including for a time high school students from Hardyston, Hamburg, Ogdensburg, Vernon, and Jefferson. Construction began in 1914 beside an old oak tree on this hilltop site, which had been home to athletic fields for the rugged Franklin Miners baseball and football players. Mining for zinc intensified around 1912 with world-class size operations and the need for skilled labor calling for the first vocational-technical school in the county to be built to educate workers. Mining of iron began in the 1760s and the first school was a log structure near the Baptist Church, replaced by a brick school in 1871 when iron production increased and railroads arrived. Franklin has held valuable minerals for over 1 billion years.
