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  1. Alexandria City High School is an above average, public school located in ALEXANDRIA, VA. It has 4,531 students in grades 9-12 with a student-teacher ratio of 16 to 1. According to state test scores, 42% of students are at least proficient in math and 75% in reading.

  2. alexandria city high school; francis c. hammond middle school; george washington middle school; jefferson-houston prek-8; patrick henry k-8 school; early childhood center; charles barrett elementary school; cora kelly school for math, science and technology; douglas macarthur elementary school; ferdinand t. day elementary school; george mason ...

  3. Alexandria City High School. 3330 King St, Alexandria, Virginia | (703) 824-6800. # 13,242-17,655 in National Rankings. Overall Score less than 25.

  4. Robotics to Worlds. Casey Donahue, Editor • May 10, 2024. For the third consecutive year, the Titans Robotics team went to the For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) World Championships in Houston, Texas from... Emotion, Upheaval and Reckoning: Inside the High School Project. April 26, 2024.

  5. BACK TO THE ALEXANDRIA CITY HIGH SCHOOL SITE. ACTIVITIES & CLUBS. Alexandria City Activities & Clubs. 23-24 Sports/Activities/Club Fundraising Request Form. ACPS Hall of Fame. AFTER SCHOOL BUSES. Free Dash Bus. 2023 FALL SPORTS ACTIVITY BUS. 2023 Fall Sports Activity Bus Schedule.

  6. The History of Alexandria's High Schools. Alexandria City High School initially opened its doors as T.C. Wililams High School 1965, and graduated its first class in June 1967.At the time, it was one of three public high schools along with George Washington High School and Francis C. Hammond High School.Parker-Gray High School, which served black high school students from 1950 onward, had begun ...

  7. In November 2020, the school board unanimously voted to rename T. C. Williams High School and Matthew Maury Elementary School, with name selection coming before the 2021–22 school year. This follows years of community efforts to rename T. C. Williams because its namesake, a former superintendent of Alexandria City Public Schools, was a supporter of racial segregation in schools.