Foxborough Regional Charter School

The Foxborough Regional Charter School is a college prep, K through 12, charter school located in Foxborough, Massachusetts, United States.

Foxborough Regional Charter School
Foxborough Regional Charter School
Location
131 Central Street
Foxborough, Massachusetts

Coordinates42.0567°N 71.2455°W / 42.0567; -71.2455
Information
TypeCharter
MottoEnter to learn, exit to lead!
Established1998
NCES School ID250005201250
Faculty77.40 (on FTE basis)[1]
GradesK to 12
Enrollment1,139[1] (2009–10)
Student to teacher ratio14.72:1[1]
Color(s)Navy blue & white
MascotFalcons
NicknameFRCS
Websitehttp://www.foxboroughrcs.org

History

Founded as the SABIS Foxborough Regional School,[2] a member of the SABIS international network of private charter schools, Foxborough Regional Charter School, or FRCS, opened at the start of the 1998 school year with 582 students in grades kindergarten through eighth. To accommodate their growing student population's need for a practical cafeteria and gym, the school built a cafetorium in 1999, which served as a gymnasium during gym class, and a cafeteria during lunch hours. In 2000, a new wing was built to allow for more elementary students. In 2001 a temporary, six-classroom modular building was installed for the middle school students. In January 2012, a new $16,000,000 facility was completed and now holds the middle and high school students. The former middle school classrooms were converted into elementary school rooms.[3]

FRCS split from SABIS in 2007[4] due to conflicts between SABIS' proprietary curriculum and Massachusetts' guidelines for charter schools.[5]

References

  1. "Foxborough Regional Charter School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved 15 April 2012. Total Students: 1,139 (2009-2010)
  2. "Annual Report: 2002 - 2003" (PDF). SABIS Foxborough Regional Charter School. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  3. "History". Foxborough Regional Charter School. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  4. Vaznis, James (4 October 2007). "Charter school plan clears big hurdle". Boston Globe.
  5. "The Achievement Gap Wins One". Boston Globe. 10 March 2008.
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