Mr. Duncan is one of Mead High’s newest English teachers.
He grew up in Columbus, Ohio, but he has lived in Longmont for most of his life. He went to Wright State University for his undergraduate...
Nichole Lyn Rue, known to her students as Ms. Rue, is a cornerstone here at Mead High School. She teaches AP Seminar, English, English extensions, and also advises student council. She has been an educator...
Once every year, multilingual students take a test to show that they know and understand English. This test has about three sections, and each of the tests typically take two or three hours. The first...
Mead High is now offering AP Seminar as an English credit. This change started at the beginning of this year, the 2022-2023 school year. Though AP Seminar has been offered at Mead for years, it has always...
Mrs. Nichole Rue is an English teacher currently teaching General English 10, AP Seminar, and E-Credit here at Mead High School. She’s been teaching for a total of nine years, all of which have been...
Do you remember in elementary school when your whole class went on over to the school library to pick out books? Do you remember the reading quizzes for Accelerated Reading (described by Gretzky Gilman...
"It has been fifty years after the book was first released and the book's message still resonates with a large group of people. Its message still holds true: that all people are created equal. And, if this book can give hope to me, think about how much it can give to other students, especially others of marginalized groups who have also felt racism or any other discrimination."
***To appreciate the following article, it would help to read the original article about why schools ought not to teach To Kill a Mockingbird written by SVVSD Language Arts coordinator Zac Chase.
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