Dwight Morrow High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
274 Knickerbocker Road , , 07631 United States | |
Coordinates | 40°54′29″N 73°58′50″W / 40.908126°N 73.980656°W |
Information | |
Type | Public high school |
Established | January 1933 |
School district | Englewood Public School District |
NCES School ID | 340474000388[1] |
Principal | Joseph Armental |
Faculty | 81.0 FTEs[1] |
Enrollment | 1,078 (as of 2023–24)[1] |
Student to teacher ratio | 13.3:1[1] |
Campus | Suburban |
Color(s) | Maroon and white[2] |
Athletics conference | Big North Conference (general) North Jersey Super Football Conference (football) |
Team name | Maroon Raiders[2] |
Newspaper | Maroon Tribune[3] |
Yearbook | Engle Log |
Website | www |
Dwight Morrow High School is a four-year comprehensive public high school located in Englewood, in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, operating as part of the Englewood Public School District. The school also serves students from Englewood Cliffs, who attend as part of a sending/receiving relationship.[4] Dwight Morrow high school shares its campus with the Academies at Englewood.
As of the 2023–24 school year, the school had an enrollment of 1,078 students and 81.0 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 13.3:1. There were 567 students (52.6% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 126 (11.7% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch.[1]
The Academies at Englewood is a four-year magnet high school established in 2002 that serves students in the ninth through twelfth grades from across Bergen County and shares the campus with Dwight Morrow.[5] The program was started by John Grieco (founder of the Bergen County Academies) who was brought in as district superintendent in an effort to diversify the student body at Dwight Morrow High School by attracting "more white and Asian students to the high school" from outside the Englewood community to an academically challenging, high-performing magnet program that was modeled after his Bergen County Academies, with students being admitted on a competitive basis and half coming from outside of the city.[6]
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