Hudson Public Schools

Hudson Public Schools
Hudson Public Schools Logo
Location
155 Apsley Street
Hudson, MA 01749
District information
Type Public
Grades PK-12
Superintendent Dr. Jodi L. Fortuna
Schools 5
Budget $33,436,766 (2007) [1]
Students and staff
Students 2,905 [2]
Teachers 227.4 [3]
Student-teacher ratio 13.1 to 1 [3]
Other information
Website Hudson Public Schools

The Hudson Public Schools District is a coalition of public schools located in Hudson, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. The superintendent of Hudson Public Schools is Dr. Jodi L. Fortuna. The Hudson Public Schools' office is located at 155 Apsley Street in Hudson in the former Harriman Grammar School building.

About Hudson Public Schools

Vision:

In partnership with families and community, we will maintain standards of academic excellence, preparing all students to be intellectually curious, academically confident, and successful active citizens in a competitive and global environment.

Goals:

· Develop high-quality curriculum, instruction and assessments

· Continuously improve instruction, informed by data

· Establish and clearly communicate consistent and high expectations

Values:

Learning and Growth – We believe that both student and adult learning must be attended to. We believe in the potential of all students to grow continuously and to develop the scholarship, critical thinking skills, independence, and personal responsibility required for success in school, career, and life. We believe that every adult must strive to continually develop their professional practice as well as play an active role in the professional learning of their colleagues.

High Expectations – We believe in rigorous academic standards for students and rigorous professional standards for educators. We have high expectations for students’ academic, ethical, civic, and social and emotional development. We have high expectations for educators’ professionalism and commitment to their own learning, growth and professional practice.

Accountability – We believe that at the district, school, and classroom levels, we must hold each other accountable for meeting goals, benchmarks, and fulfilling the high expectations that we have for every member of the Hudson Public School community.

Consistency – We believe that learning expectations must be consistently rigorous across schools, grades, courses and classrooms. Students, parents and educators must know what the expectations and responsibilities are for each of their roles.

Elementary Schools (grades K-4)

Middle Schools (grades 5-7)

Quinn Middle School is a Project Lead The Way PLTW school offering the Gateway to Technology Program GTT. Classes include Intro To Engineering for Grade 5, Design and Modeling for Grade 6 and Automation and Robotics for Grade 7. "Middle school is the perfect time for students to explore and learn that there is more than one way to reach a solution. PLTW Gateway provides engineering and biomedical science curriculum for middle school students that challenges, inspires, and offers schools variety and flexibility. Students get rigorous and relevant experiences through activity-, project-, and problem-based learning. They use industry-leading technology to solve problems while gaining skills in communication, collaboration, critical-thinking, and creativity." [4]

High Schools (grades 8-12)

Hudson High School is a certified Project Lead The Way PLTW high school with Worcester Polytechnic Institute WPI offering classes in Engineering. Classes include Exploring Science-GTT, Energy & the Environment and Medical Detectives for Grade 8 as well as Introduction to Engineering Design, Principles of Engineering, Digital Electronics and Engineering Design & Development for Grades 9-12. "PLTW EngineeringTM is more than just another high school engineering program. It is about applying science, technology, engineering, and math through a project-based, hands-on approach to solve complex, open-ended problems in a real-world context. Students focus on the process of defining and solving a problem, not on getting the “right” answer. They learn how to apply STEM knowledge, skills, and habits of mind to make the world a better place through innovation." [5]

Former Schools (in Chronological Order)[6]

References

  1. "Hudson Public Schools Total Expenditure Per Pupil, All Funds, By Function". Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  2. "Hudson Public Schools Enrollment Data". Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  3. 1 2 "Hudson Public Schools Teacher Data (2008-09)". Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  4. https://www.pltw.org/our-programs/pltw-gateway
  5. https://www.pltw.org
  6. Halprin, Lewis; The Hudson Historical Society (2001) [First published 1999]. Images of America: Hudson. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 85–94. ISBN 0-7385-0073-9.

External links

Coordinates: 42°23′46.12″N 71°34′07.69″W / 42.3961444°N 71.5688028°W / 42.3961444; -71.5688028

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