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All CMCSS activities and practices for December 6 are cancelled. For activities for Saturday, December 7, a determination will be made and announced at 10:00 a.m. on Saturday.

Please note: This article was originally published on 12/6/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year.



Schools Closed on Friday, December 6, 2013

Please note: This article was originally published on 12/5/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. Schools Closed



2014-15 Rezoning Avoided With Plan

Please note: This article was originally published on 12/5/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. CMCSS presented its plan to the School Board to better balance school enrollment for the 2014-15 school year without rezoning students from their current school assignment. Rossview Elementary’s fifth graders will be assigned to a classroom wing at Rossview Middle School. St. Bethlehem Elementary, which shares its attendance zone with Burt Elementary, will relocate its third grade students to Burt, which currently serves the shared zone’s fourth and fifth graders.



RHS Student Wins License Plate Design Contest

Please note: This article was originally published on 11/22/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. Brandon Anderson, a student at Clarksville’s Rossview High School, received first prize in a license plate design contest staged by the Tennessee Suicide Prevention Network (TSPN). On November 22, Anderson received a $1,000 check and was honored by members of TSPN at the high school. Anderson’s design and those of other contest winners has been incorporated in a final design for the plate, which was authorized by Gov. Bill Haslam to raise awareness of the issue of suicide prevention. A share of the proceeds from the sale of these plates will fund suicide prevention awareness and education projects statewide.



FAFSA Help is Available

Please note: This article was originally published on 11/21/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. As high school seniors prepare for college, parents face the somewhat intimidating paper chase, known as the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The U.S. Department of Education begins accepting the application beginning January 1 of each year for the upcoming academic year. Each application period is 18 months; most federal, state, and institutional aid is provided on a first come, first served basis. Tennessee is one of six states in the country that awards state grants (the HOPE Scholarship) on a first-come, first-served basis until the money runs out.



CMCSS Scores 3 A’s, 1 B in Achievement on State Report Card

Please note: This article was originally published on 11/13/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. The state Department of Education today released its system by system report card and Clarksville-Montgomery County has scored an all-time high in both achievement and growth since the transition to the Tennessee Diploma Project standards.  CMCSS earned three A’s and one B in Achievement and three B’s and one A in  student growth. “Am I surprised at these results?” Schools Director B.J. Worthington asked. “No, because our teachers and administrators are working tirelessly to make sure our students are successful.  Am I pleased? Yes, very.”



Preparing for Inclement Weather

Please note: This article was originally published on 11/4/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. It is the School System’s goal to keep our students safe. Parents are advised to keep current information on their child’s emergency card. Thus, when schools are faced with threatening weather, the district’s telephone notification system is programmed to send a message to the number provided. Also, parents are advised to listen to radio and television reports, and they are encouraged to call the transportation information line at 358-2006 for up to date transportation information, or go to www.cmcss.net for school closing information.



Moore Magnet is First CMCSS Green-Certified School

Please note: This article was originally published on 10/10/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. Multiple ribbons were cut at Moore Magnet Elementary today as the school became the first in the district to be designated as green certified. The school also cut a ribbon for the opening of the first system-wide outdoor classroom, located in front of the Madison Street and Pageant Lane school. The outdoor classroom, which encompasses plant and water science, was built through the CMCSS Operations Department,  community support and designed by architect Bradley Martin and Greg Lyle. The project started nearly seven years ago as an idea and came to fruition with the ribbon cutting ceremony today.  It will be open to all schools in the district.



High Schools Offer Insight On NCAA Rules

Please note: This article was originally published on 10/9/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. All seven CMCSS high schools will offer a program/presentation to inform parents and student athletes about NCAA requirements (i.e. Course requirements for eligibility, GPA and ACT/SAT requirements for eligibility; how and when to register with NCAA; NCAA information for students with disabilities, differences between Division I and II eligibility requirements, categories of initial eligibility).



Capitol Documentary Debuts in Montgomery County

Please note: This article was originally published on 10/8/2013. Information and/or dates from past events may be not be relevant for the current school year. From the day its cornerstone was laid through the present, the Tennessee State Capitol has been the site of some of the Volunteer State’s most momentous historical events. Now the Capitol’s story has been captured on a video documentary that will soon be appearing in classrooms throughout Montgomery County. At a news conference Tuesday, Secretary of State Tre Hargett and Clarksville-Montgomery County Director of Schools B.J. Worthington were joined by state legislators Reps, Curtis Johnson and Joe Pitts, Sen. Mark Green, school board members Horace Murphy, Jr., George Giles and Jimmie Garland and County Mayor Carolyn Bowers in announcing that DVDs of the documentary will be distributed to every school in the school system.