Thurgood Marshall High School (Ohio)

Thurgood Marshall STEM High School
Address
4447 Hoover Ave
Dayton, Ohio, 45417
United States
Coordinates 39°45′46″N 84°15′39″W / 39.762812°N 84.260914°W / 39.762812; -84.260914Coordinates: 39°45′46″N 84°15′39″W / 39.762812°N 84.260914°W / 39.762812; -84.260914
Information
School type Public Secondary School
School board Dayton Public Schools
Principal Sharon Goins
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 700 approx.
Language English
Area Urban
Color(s) Purple and Gold         
Athletics conference Dayton City League
Mascot Cougar
Website Thurgood Marshall Website

Thurgood Marshall High School is a public high school in Dayton, Ohio.[1] The school is named for the late African American pioneering civil rights attorney and Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

About

Thurgood Marshall High School was formed in 2007 after the merger of Colonel White High School and Nettie Lee Roth Middle School.[2] Roth had previously been a high school until it was converted to a middle school in 1982. Thurgood Marshall was built on the former site of Roth and decided to use Colonel White's nickname of the "Cougars." The school colors are purple and gold, purple being from Roth's purple & white and the gold from Colonel White's green & gold.

Thurgood Marshall students select either the School of Humanities and Cultural Studies or Service and Leadership as ninth graders. The incoming freshmen apply for the admission into the AMA (Academic Magnet Academy) and are accepted based upon meeting the program's entrance requirements. These learning communities are designed to prepare students for entrance into a colleges and universities of higher learning. It is the mission of the small learning communities of Thurgood Marshall High School to prepare students to become active, functioning citizens by providing them with knowledge and skills in academics and humanities.

Ohio High School Athletic Association State Championships

* titles won by Nettie Lee Roth High School prior to that school closing
+ titles won by Colonel White High School prior to that school closing

References

External links



This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.