Schools
New Manchester to Reduce Student Populations, Mobile Classrooms
Douglas County's fifth high school is set to drop enrollments by slightly more than 1,000 students combined for Alexander, Chapel Hill, Douglas County and Lithia Springs.
It may be graduation season, but the Aug. 4 start date for Douglas County schools' 2011-12 year is quickly approaching, and the school system is finishing its fifth high school so it will be ready by that date.
“I’m very passionate about opening a new school and what it means to the students,” New Manchester High School Principal Connie Craft said. “We may not be ready until the doors open in August, but we will be ready by Aug. 1.”
New Manchester High, built on 73 acres off Boundary Waters Parkway, will be Douglas' first high school in the southeast corner of the county in what school system officials consider a high-growth area. The school, which cost slightly less than $51.3 million, is expected to reduce overcrowding at , , and high schools.
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“The public needs to know we don’t build in anticipation of growth; we build after the need has already been established,” said Craft, who left Douglas County High in February after five years as its principal to lead New Manchester.
New Manchester's Impact
According to figures from Chief Operating Officer Dudley Spruill and high school instruction director Rob Brown, student enrollment at the current high schools is expected to drop, as will the need for mobile classrooms at two schools. In total, 60 of the county's current high school teachers are set to transfer to the new school.
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:
- Enrollment on April 29: 1,765
- Projected enrollment drop for 2011-12: 126
- Current mobile classrooms: 39
- Mobile classrooms needed for 2011-12: 18
- Teachers transferring to New Manchester: 9
:
- Enrollment on April 29: 1,711
- Projected enrollment drop for 2011-12: 555
- Current mobile classrooms: 28
- Mobile classrooms needed for 2011-12: 10
- Teachers transferring to New Manchester: 13
:
- Enrollment on April 29: 2,034
- Projected enrollment drop for 2011-12: 185
- Current mobile classrooms, all of which will be needed for 2011-12: 22
- Teachers transferring to New Manchester: 22
:
- Enrollment on April 29: 1,695
- Projected enrollment drop for 2011-12: 179
- Current mobile classrooms, all of which will be needed for 2011-12: 8
- Teachers transferring to New Manchester: 16
In addition, Craft said four teachers are transferring from county middle schools, three are other county transfers, four are from outside Douglas, and one is from H.A.V.E.N. Academy. Roughly 150 district teachers applied for the positions, Craft added.
Superintendent Gordon Pritz said the new school will provide some "much-needed relief" from portable classrooms.
The maximum relief provided by New Manchester "will not be immediate because one of the options we’ve given the students is to stay at their current school if they want," he said.
"But over time, we should see these portable classrooms greatly reduced," Pritz said. "There are close to 100 of them now at those schools, and that will be reduced down to probably less than 20, depending on whether we continue to grow.”
New Manchester's Enrollment
New Manchester's projected enrollment when it opens is 1,321 students—including 270 seniors—which is about 650 students short of its 1,975 capacity.
The lower-than-capacity enrollment and continued need for some portable classrooms partially stems from the Douglas County Board of Education's decision to allow juniors and seniors to continue at their current high schools, even if they're zoned for New Manchester. Rising ninth-graders who are siblings of those juniors and seniors can also stick to the school they were formerly zoned for.
However, students must provide their own transportation.
New Douglas County Principal Tim Scott said it was "really generous" that the school system let students stay at their current schools.
“You get to choose, and this was really good for our parents," said Scott, a former administrator at in Northeast Cobb.
With the bulk of New Manchester’s students coming from Chapel Hill, Lithia Springs and Douglas County and a handful from Alexander, Craft said she hopes students will feel connected to one another quickly.
“We want to blend the students coming from the three primary contributors to this school into a united group of New Manchester Jaguars,” said Craft, a 30-year educator with 12 years of experience in Douglas County. “It’s a wonderful opportunity for students. It’s a state-of-the-art facility. We’ve got incredible athletic opportunities. Our goal is to become a performing-arts magnet (school).”
21st-Century Classrooms
Craft said each of the school’s slightly more than 100 classrooms will offer 21st-century technology—Promethean interactive whiteboards, LCD projectors, teachers using laptops and students having access to laptop labs. She also said the entire campus will have Wi-Fi access.
The school will offer four classes next year with the Georgia Department of Education’s Virtual School, called "Blended Learning" classes.
“We’re going to have ‘bring your own technology’ for students,” Craft said. “We want to harness their enthusiasm and natural ability to use technology."
The school’s cafeteria will be able to serve 700 students at once but likely will serve only 500. The cafeteria, along with most of the building, will have a scarlet-and-gray color scheme, matching the school's colors.
Adjacent to the cafeteria is a covered courtyard where students can eat. Also, sports teams can practice there during inclement weather.
Craft said New Manchester has attracted top fine-arts students. The entire theater complex, with baffles hanging from ceiling tiles in the chorus and band rooms, boasts “wonderful acoustics." The auditorium will seat 780 people and includes an orchestra pit.
The school’s gym includes an elevated walking track, a weight room and an auxiliary gym with a rubberized floor. The auxiliary gym is big enough to allow games to be played simultaneously, Craft said.
The main gym will feature a Jumbotron scoreboard above the center of the court. Outside, the school will have a football field, track, tennis courts, and softball and baseball fields.
New Manchester’s athletic program is set to start in Region 6-AAA. The mascot, a jaguar, is consistent with the cat mascots of the county's other four high schools.
Scott said he is thoroughly impressed by New Manchester High.
“It’s a beautiful campus,” he said. “I’m new to the school system and our Board of Education, and central office people really take care of us because they really built a first-class facility.”
You can see a video tour of New Manchester by clicking here.
