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Conestoga Valley School District

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Conestoga Valley School District
Location
502 Mt. Sidney Rd.
Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17602
United States
District information
TypePublic school district
MottoCharacter. Community. Commitment.
GradesK-12
Established1958 (1958)[1]
SuperintendentDr. Daniel Hartman[2]
SchoolsConestoga Valley High School
Conestoga Valley Middle School
Brownstown Elementary School, Fritz Elementary School, Leola Elementary School, Smoketown Elementary School
NCES District ID4206480
Students and staff
Students4000[3]
Athletic conferenceLancaster-Lebanon League
District mascotBuckskin
Colors    Red and blue
Other information
State District ID113361703
Websitewww.conestogavalley.org

The Conestoga Valley School District is a school district covering East Lampeter Township, Upper Leacock Township and West Earl Township in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. It is a member of Lancaster-Lebanon Intermediate Unit (IU) 13. The district operates one High School, one Middle School and four Elementary Schools.

History

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In 1958, East Lampeter Township, Upper Leacock Township, and West Earl township merged their school systems to form the Conestoga Valley School District. Its original high school was dedicated on present-day Smoketown Elementary School as East Lampeter High School. Sometime after 1970, the high school was moved to another location along Horseshoe Road, renamed Conestoga Valley High School, and built completely new while the old building was dedicated as Smoketown Elementary School.[1]

Penn Johns Elementary School

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Located in Bird In Hand, Penn Johns Elementary School was the previous fifth elementary school of Conestoga Valley. It was the last remaining school for the Plain community that over time lost its original purpose and transitioned into a regular elementary school that served all local residents. It was established around 1953 as an Amish and Old Order Mennonite school, but the Amish community no longer attended the school. In 2007, the Conestoga Valley school board voted to close the school for good, citing new teacher certification requirements, operating costs, and new curriculum requirements. The school served around 35 students at the time of closing taught by only two teachers, one for grades 1-4 and one for grades 5-8. The 35 students then matriculated into the four remaining elementary schools.[4]

Recent developments

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Conestoga Valley recently renovated its previous middle school to become the home of Smoketown Elementary as well as the District Offices and the elementary Conestoga Valley Virtual Academy (CVVA). Leola Elementary is in the midst of renovations and will move back into its newly renovated building in the 2026-27 school year. In addition, a brand new middle school, Gerald G. Huesken Middle School, was built and opened its doors for the 2022-23 school year. It now houses grades 6-8; the previous middle school was home to only grades 7-8.</ref>

Academics

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Conestoga Valley is committed to an assessment program reflecting national, state, and local measures. Each year, CV administers the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) math and English Language Arts (ELA) exams in grades three through eight, and science in grades four and eight. High school students take the state’s end-of-course Keystone Exams in algebra, literature, and biology. CV maintains a balance of diagnostic, benchmark, formative and summative assessments at all levels, including locally-developed assessments.</ref>

Demographical snapshot

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Source: School Newsletter (January 2014)[3]

Asian students 5.0%
Hispanic students 24.0%
Black students 7.7%
White (non-Hispanic) students 52.6%
Unclassified(including multi-racial) 3.5%
Multi 6.9%
Other(including multi-racial) 0.3%

Schools

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Notable alumni

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References

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  1. ^ a b "East Lampeter Township History" (PDF). Conestoga Valley Chapter of the Lancaster County Bicentennial Committee.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Superintendent's Corner". Conestoga Valley School District.
  3. ^ a b "School Newsletter". January 2014. Archived from the original on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2014-02-26.
  4. ^ "Penn Johns supporters make plea to keep school open". Lancaster Online. Archived from the original on 2013-04-11.
  5. ^ "Kim Glass Profile". University of Arizona. Archived from the original on 2012-09-06.
  6. ^ "Jonathan Groff Biography". Jonathangroff.org. Archived from the original on 2013-04-15.
  7. ^ "Floyd Landis". Topend Sports Network.
  8. ^ "Kevin Shaffer". NFL.
  9. ^ "Ryan Manelick". The Observer.