Norfolk County Agricultural High School

Norfolk County Agricultural High School
Norfolk County Agricultural High School
Address
400 Main Street
Walpole, Massachusetts 02081
United States
Coordinates 42°09′55″N 71°14′29″W / 42.165217°N 71.241403°W / 42.165217; -71.241403Coordinates: 42°09′55″N 71°14′29″W / 42.165217°N 71.241403°W / 42.165217; -71.241403
Information
School type secondary, agricultural
Established 1917[1]
Superintendent Dr. Tammy Quinn
CEEB code 222172
Principal Mr. Michael T. Counyer
Staff 21 (as of 2007-08)[2]
Teaching staff 44.8 (FTE) (as of 2007-08)[3]
Grades 9-12
Enrollment roughly 500 (as of 2015-2016)[3]
Student to teacher ratio 10.2 (as of 2007-08)[3]
Campus size 365 acres (1.48 km2)[1]
Color(s) Blue and Gold
Athletics conference Mayflower League
Mascot Head on a Ram on a human body
Team name Rams
Average SAT scores 504 verbal
507 math
485 writing
1496 total (2015-2016)[4]
Newspaper Aggie Works
Yearbook yearly
Website http://www.norfolkaggie.org/

Norfolk County Agricultural High School is a public high school in Walpole, Massachusetts, United States. The school offers specialty training to students who are interested in pursuing careers in Animal and Marine Science, Plant and Environmental Science, and Diesel and Mechanical Technology. The school is one of only 3 in Massachusetts to promote agriscience and agribusiness opportunities, as well as one of 4 in the nation. It is also the best environmental and plant science department possible. NCAHS has a high retention rate and a low dropout rate (0% in the 2015-2016 school year).

Campus

The school has several buildings. Kemp Hall is the main academic building. There is a new animal science building, a new agricultural mechanics building, and a plant science building with four greenhouses. There is also an old administrative building and another building with a computer lab, library and cafeteria. Two new buildings were completed in 2014; the new History and English department called Avery Hall, and the new Administration and mathematics building, called McFarland hall. The school has two softball/baseball fields and two soccer fields. The campus also has two outdoor equestrian rings, an indoor ring with a newly built horse barn, and an AKC-certified dog ring.

Curriculum

Students follow a comprehensive curriculum composed of academic and vocational courses. The school offers three program majors: Diesel and Mechanical Technology, Animal and Marine Science, and Plant and Environmental Science. Students choose a specific interest within one of the three program majors at the end of grade 10. Upperclassmen have the opportunity to acquire on-the-job training and demonstrate work readiness through the Cooperative Education Program. The school has exchange programs with Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University.[5]

Extracurricular activities

Student groups and activities at Norfolk County Agricultural High School include agricultural mechanics club, marine club, animal science club, conservation club, equestrian drill team, FFA, floriculture club, horse club, research animal technology club, kennel club, landscape club, math club, National Honor Society, newspaper, peer network, student council, Team Harmony, and veterinarian assistant club. The school has also recently gained an Art Club, and is working towards a Theatre club as well.

The school's athletic teams, known as the Norfolk Aggie Rams, compete in the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association Mayflower League. Teams are fielded in baseball, basketball, golf, cross country, soccer, softball and volleyball.

References

  1. 1 2 Ferguson, Keith (2009-04-30). "Charm in a barn". Dedham Daily News Transcript. Retrieved 2010-05-05. The 40-foot-by-100-foot barn was built in 1919, two years after the 365-acre Aggie was founded.
  2. "District Detail for Norfolk County Agricultural". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
  3. 1 2 3 "School Detail for Norfolk County Agr". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
  4. http://profiles.doe.mass.edu/state_report/sat_perf.aspx
  5. Laidler, John (2004-02-05). "Norfolk Agricultural, Tufts widen exchange programs". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
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