Catholic Diocese Of Tyler, Texas South Broadway Mailing Address PO Box Catholic Tyler, texas 757028195 E-mail JEPStrick@aol.comWebsite http//www.thecathedral.info Tyler parochial schools http://www.dioceseoftyler.org/westcentral.htm
El Paso Texas.com: El Paso High Schools K schools. Last Updated 08/02/00. Back to Top El Paso ISD El Paso ISD High School's Home Pages Andress High School 5400 Sun Valley Dr. El Paso, texas http://www.elpasotexas.com/ephigh.htm
El Paso Texas.com: El Paso Elementary And Middle Schools Click here for Ysleta Elementary and PreK schools. Ysleta Middle schools . CaminoReal Middle School (915) 858-1013 9393 Alameda Ave. El Paso, texas 79907. http://www.elpasotexas.com/epelem.htm
Extractions: McAllen ISD South Texas Ccommunity College University of Texas - Pan American Schools - Home Home About Our Town Administration Bids Birth and Death Certificates Calendars City Charter/Ordinances Civic Center Economic Development Elected Officials Engineering and Planning Forms - All Departments Frequently Asked Questions Job Opportunities Links Meetings and Minutes Municipal Court News Permits Public Safety Public Works Recreation and Culture Schools Site Map Telephone Directory Transportation Utilities Weather MISD McAllen is pleased to be served by McAllen Indepedent School District, a TEA Recognized district for 1998, 1999 and 2000. The mission of MISD is to educate all students to become lifelong learners and productive citizens in a global socity through a program of educational excellence utilizing technology and actively involving parents and the community. Click for MISD Online High Schools Nikki Rowe
Laredo & Webb County Schools & Higher Learning Laredo Job Corps Center, (956) 7275147. texas Career, (956) 717-3757. ParochialSchools. Blessed Sacrament, (956) 722-1222. Guadalupe Parish, (956) 722-3915.St. http://www.laredochamber.com/schools.htm
Extractions: Laredo Independent School District Laredo I.S.D. has an enrollment of more than 22,000 students. It is home to twenty-nine educational institutions; twenty-one elementary, four middle and three high schools, and the city's and South Texas' only art magnet school: The Vidal M. Treviño School of Communication and Fine Arts.
St. Alban's Episcopal School In Arlington, Texas St. Alban's is a member of the texas Association of Private and Parochialschools (TAPPS) and the Christian schools Athletic Fellowship (CSAF). http://www.stalbans-arlington.org/athletics.asp
Extractions: Athletics Sports Calendar Sports Opportunities Sports News St. Alban's Episcopal School's Athletics and Physical Education program is designed to give students the opportunity to compete, take on individual challenges, and work as a team toward common goals. All students participate on a daily basis in physical fitness activities and are provided with a variety of instructional activities.
Living In Las Cruces Southern New Mexico extends from Mesquite south to the El Paso County, texas border and PRIVATE parochialSCHOOLS Opportunities for private and parochial education are readily http://www.mveda.com/html/borderplex_living.html
Extractions: Education plays a continuing role in the success of the BorderPlex. Much of the New Mexico Legislature's annual budget is dedicated to improving schools, teachers and curriculum throughout the state. All three public school districts in Doña Ana County offer special programs and vocational-technical classes. The Hatch district extends from the northern border of Doña Ana County to about five miles north of Radium Springs. The Las Cruces district extends from this point to just north of Mesquite.The Gadsden district extends from Mesquite south to the El Paso County, Texas border and to the State of Chihuahua, Republic of Mexico border and east into neighboring Otero County. Serving the southern half of Doña Ana County, which includes Santa Teresa, Sunland Park, Anthony and Chaparral, the Gadsden Independent School District is one of the state's largest. Gadsden includes two high schools, three middle schools and 12 elementary schools. Employing more than 1,600, it ranks as one of the county's larger employers.
Schools - Sacred Heart Catholic Community Sacred Heart High School has earned the texas Association of Private and ParochialSchools State or texas Class A Overall State Championship Trophy for three http://www.nortexinfo.net/SacredHeart/schools.html
Extractions: Sacred Heart School is a Preschool through Grade 12, co-educational day school located in Muenster, Texas, a rural German Catholic farming community of 1,400 people near the Red River. Sacred Heart School was founded in April of 1890, less than 6 months after the community of Muenster was established. The Olivetan Benedictine Sisters came to teach in 1895 and recently celebrated 100 years of service to the children of Sacred Heart School. The school was founded on the principals of faith, tradition, sacrifice, and excellence. Those same qualities still characterize the school today. Sacred Heart Preschool is a separate free standing Montessori program for three and four year olds. The National Catholic Education Association awarded us the Elizabeth Ann Seton Award , a national level award, for the outstanding early childhood program at Sacred Heart. Located in it's own modern facility, Sacred Heart Preschool not only cultivates each child's own natural desire to learn but emphasizes moral and spiritual growth. Each child is important and the atmosphere is warm and caring. Parents should understand that a Montessori school is neither a baby-sitting service nor a play school. Rather, it is a unique cycle of learning designed to take advantage of the child's sensitive years when they can absorb information from any enriched environment.
FACTS Students compete against public schools in preseason play and in theTexas Private and parochial schools(TAPPS) 5-A district. Technology http://www.providencehs.net/development/facts.htm
Extractions: FACTS Quick information about our school Mission Providence High School is a Catholic, secondary, single gender school whose mission is to provide a quality education to young women in an academic community grounded in and permeated by trust in a provident God who lives and cares for all creation. Believing that each person is called by God to be actively involved in bringing about justice, peace, freedom and love. History Founded in 1951 by the Congregation of Divine Providence, Providence High School is an all-girls high school set on three acres in downtown San Antonio. The school was incorporated in 1991 and is governed by a Board of Directors. The school is no longer owned and operated by the Congregation of Divine Providence, but is a CDP sponsored institution and the Congregation retains some rights and responsibilities. The school is situated on the historically designated Drought property. School Profile Graduation requirements - 27 credits.
TABT - OBTA teaching of biology/life science. 2. Candidates from public, private,and parochial schools are eligible. 3. A minimum of three http://www.texarkanacollege.edu/~mstorey/TABT/OBTA.html
Extractions: Sponsored by Prentice Hall OBTA Director Candidate Record Form Letters of Support Rubrics ... Characteristics of an Oustanding Biology Teacher Each year, the National Association of Biology Teachers (NABT), through its Outstanding Biology Teacher Awards (OBTA), attempts to identify an excellent biology instructor in each of the 50 U.S. states; Canada; Washington, DC; Puerto Rico; and overseas territories. Nominations of worthy candidates by NABT members and friends help us to recognize those individuals whose outstanding work in the classroom qualifies them for this award. Prentice Hall, the OBTA program sponsor, gives each awardee a pair of precision binoculars, and Leica Micro- systems awards microscopes to the recipients. Award winners and their schools also receive certificates, as well as public and professional recognition. Each year, NABT honors Outstanding Biology Teacher Award recipients at a special ceremony in conjunction with its national convention. What Is the Process? Candidates will complete a form summarizing their professional experience, academic background, and educational philosophy and provide four recommendations from colleagues familiar with their teaching effectiveness. Classroom observations and/or videotapes are important steps in the evaluation process. Videotape and/or site visit will be required of finalists only. Finalists will be notified. What Are the Criteria? Teaching ability and experience, cooperativeness in the school and community, inventiveness, initiative and student-teacher relationships.
Web Texas Web texas is no longer maintained NOTE We are no longer maintaining Web texas. Don't panic though; there are now better resources available. Please see one of the sites below for a more comprehensive listing of Web sites in texas. http://www.utexas.edu/texas/edu
Extractions: format this article to print SISTERS OF THE INCARNATE WORD AND BLESSED SACRAMENT. The Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament, founded in 1625 in Lyons, France, was the second group of Catholic educators to move to Texas. When Bishop Jean Marie Odin qv asked for volunteers to work in the Texas missions, four sisters offered their services, and with Frances (Sister Superior St. Claire) Valentine qv they arrived in Galveston on June 29, 1852. They remained with the Ursuline Sisters qv for several months studying English and Spanish before going to Brownsville in March 1853. The sisters' first house was a small one-story warehouse; later they secured the loan of a four-room house. By November their first convent was completed, and a boarding and day school was conducted. At the request of Bishop Claude Marie Dubuis qv Sister St. Claire, along with volunteers from Europe, opened an independent house, Nazareth Academy, in Victoria on January 7, 1867. The sisters took part in a "community system" from 1874 to 1895, when parents petitioned for a public school in their community. When a demand was made for the nuns to wear secular clothes, the arrangement with the sisters ended. During this time they also opened a school for African Americans, qv BIBLIOGRAPHY: Catholic Archives of Texas. Mother M. Patricia Gunning, I.W.B.S.
Extractions: format this article to print DALLAS, CATHOLIC DIOCESE OF . The Catholic Diocese of Dallas, previously part of the Diocese of Galveston, was established on July 15, 1890, by Pope Leo XIII. It covered all the northern part of the state; its southernmost counties, from west to east, were Yoakum, Terry, Dawson, Borden, Mitchell, Coke, Runnels, Coleman, Brown, Mills, Hamilton, Bosque, Hill, Navarro, Henderson, Smith, Rusk, and Panola. Thomas Francis Brennan, qv the first bishop, was consecrated on April 5, 1891. Before he was transferred in February 1893 to St. John's, Newfoundland, he established a diocesan Catholic newspaper, the Texas Catholic see CATHOLIC JOURNALISM). This was the first diocesan newspaper published in Texas. In 1892 El Paso, Hudspeth, and Culberson counties were added to the diocese. At the conclusion of Bishop Brennan's tenure the Diocese of Dallas comprised twenty-five churches with resident pastors, nineteen mission churches, four hospitals, and nine academies with a combined enrollment of about 1,500 students. The diocese served a Catholic population of about 20,000, about 9,000 of whom had been born in America. Succeeding Bishop Brennan was Bishop Edward Joseph Dunne
Extractions: Home Page Links, Acronyms, and ... Free Materials Our Mission To bring the "Kids Teaching Kids" philosophy of energy education to children and educators in the schools of Texas, encouraging them to learn about energy issues and energy conservation in the classroom, and to reach out to their student bodies and communities through energy-related projects and activities so they all realize "Energy Education: It's Important For Everyone!" Part of a national effort to increase energy education in American schools, TEED has provided comprehensive energy education curricula, promoted energy awareness, and played an important role in developing future leaders in Texas schools since 1981. Originally part of the National Energy Education Development (NEED) Project, TEED gained its own 501(c)(3) non-profit status in 1990. Using a customized TEED Energy Kit of resource materials and its own Texas-specific resources, TEED provides a wide array of energy related activities and projects for use in member schools and communities, and encourages them to incorporate a five-week energy education unit provided by the National Energy Education Development (NEED) Project as a part of their school curriculum.
Ministries And Programs Of The Episcopal Diocese Of West Texas Camps and Conferences; Christian Education; College Ministry; Happening; ParochialSchools; Race Relations; texas Military Institute; United Thank Offering; Women's http://www.westtexasonline.org/ministries.htm
Extractions: click on the name of the program. We offer outreach to not only our members, but to our communities at home and in the world. These ministries and programs offer opportunities to share ourselves and our faith with others. Alphabetical Listing of Ministry Programs Serving Our Members Serving Our Youth Serving Our Community Altar Guild (Diocesan) Books of Remembrance and Thanksgiving Camps and Conferences Canterbury Associations ... Liturgy and Music Commission Solitaries of DeKoven Stewardship Department Commission on Women's Ministries Bishop's Youth Commission Camps and Conferences ... Ecumenical Commission Evangelism Department Faith Alive Good Samaritan Center Kairos Ministry Habitat for Humanity ... World Mission
Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Sacred Heart School In Carbondale" 1. schools Sacred Heart Catholic Community Sacred Heart Catholic schools http//www.nortexinfo.net/SacredHeart/schools.html2. BOBCAT's Catholic schools on http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Sacred Heart School In Carb
Extractions: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AUSTIN - Under certain provisions, two non-public schools may apply for membership in the University Interscholastic League beginning with the 2003-04 school year. The Legislative Council of the UIL voted Monday in favor of amending the UIL Constitution and Contest Rules to allow non-public schools to apply for UIL membership in the largest conference (currently conference 5A). The amendment to the Constitution will allow non-public schools to apply for UIL membership in the largest conference unless their right to participate has been suspended or revoked for violating rules or codes by another League similar to the UIL. Additionally, the schools must meet the following conditions: Are accredited by the Texas Private School Accreditation Commission. Do not qualify for membership in any other organization similar to the UIL. Meet the definition of a high school as described in the UIL Constitution and Contest Rules. The amendment is contingent upon a satisfactory settlement of current litigation regarding this matter, and approval by the Commissioner of Education. A non-public school could be assigned to a UIL district beginning with the 2003-04 school year in all activities with the exception of varsity football. Due to reclassification and realignment policies, non-public schools will not be assigned to a varsity football district until the next realignment period in the 2004-05 school year.