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How do I get an international baccalaureate diploma?
You must score 24 points or more between all of your IB exams to get a diploma. If you score 24 points or more, you will receive your diploma if: All CAS requirements have been met. There is no "N" awarded for theory of knowledge, the extended essay, or a contributing subject.Jul 31, 2015What Is the IB Curriculum? What Are IB Diploma Requirements?https://blog.prepscholar.com/ib-curriculum-ib-diploma-requirements
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[40] Rankings [ edit ]
"Koch graduated in 1941 from Newark's South Side High School in 1941 (now called Malcolm X Shabazz High School). "2010 Top High Schools", New Jersey Monthly, August 16, 2010.
Sterling High School), 2003 and 2004 (vs. Willingboro High School both years), 2006 (vs. Monmouth Regional High School), 2008 (vs.
Ocean City High School), 2009 (vs. Neptune High School), the Group II title in 2010 (vs. Chatham High School), 2011 (vs
.Pascack Hills High School), 2012 (vs. Point Pleasant Borough High School) and 2013 (vs. Willingboro High School), and won the Group I title in 2014 (vs.
Haddon Township High School); the 11 state championships and 14 appearances by the girls' basketball program in title games are the most of any public school in the state and the five consecutive titles from 2010 to 2014 is tied for the longest streak by a public school program. The boys' basketball team won the Group III state championship in 1979 (vs. Long Branch High School), 1995 (vs.
Rancocas Valley Regional High School), 1997 (vs. Steinert High School), 2001 and 2005 (both vs. Camden High School), and the 2010 Group II title (vs.
Pequannock Township High School); as South Side High School, the boys' basketball team won the Group III title in 1962 (vs. Neptune High School), 1965 (vs. South Plainfield High School), 1969 (vs.
Lincoln High School) and 1971 (vs. [14] The girls' basketball team won the 2003 Tournament of Champions, defeating Marlboro High School 48–45 in the tournament final.
[15] [16] Notable faculty [ edit ]
[21] In 2017, the team defeated the top-seeded Weequahic High School by a score of 35-0 in the North II Group I state sectional final played at Kean University, in a rematch of the 2016 final that had been won by Weequahic. [22] [23] The Future Project [ edit ] The school was the 310th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 339 schools statewide in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2014 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools", using a new ranking methodology. [6] The school had been ranked 291st in the state of 328 schools in 2012, after being ranked 314th in 2010 out of 322 schools listed.
[7] The magazine ranked the school 296th in 2008 out of 316 schools. [8] The school was ranked 312th in the magazine's September 2006 issue, which surveyed 316 schools across the state. [9] Malcolm X Shabazz has scored 20. 1 in the High School Proficiency Assessment (HSPA) test results in the subjects of math and language arts respectively. [10] Athletics [ edit ]
"High School Foes Form a Family at Rutgers", The New York Times, April 3, 2007. "'Don't you want to be able to look up in the stands and see your mom?' Carson, from Paterson's Rosa Parks School of Fine and Performing Arts (for academics and music) and Paterson Eastside (for basketball) asked Ajavon, from Newark's Malcolm X. "
Shabazz, which lost to Hoboken in the final last year 13-7 after the Redwings scored with 12 seconds left in the game, rushed the field at Alumni Stadium when the final seconds ticked off as the Bulldogs celebrated its first ever sectional title and the first for the city of Newark since West Side won North Jersey, Section 2 Group 3 in 2007. "
[38]
"Malcolm X Shabazz opened in 1914 as South Side High School. By 1972 it had been renamed for the fiery former Nation of Islam leader. "
Too Good to Be True: The Life and Work of Leslie Fiedler. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. "Shabazz girls outlast Marlboro, 48-45", The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 26, 2003.
"The seeds held form as top-seeded Shabazz held off second-seeded Marlboro, 48-45, in the championship game at the Continental Airlines Arena. "
"Education: She attended South Side High School in Newark, New Jersey"
"Shabazz rolls to redemption win over Weequahic in N2G1 final", NJ Advance Media for NJ.
"Shabazz was not going to let last year's outcome happen again. That much was clear as Shabazz jumped out to an early lead and never looked back to top rival Weequahic en route to a dominant 35-0 victory in Saturday's North Jersey, Section 2, Group 1 final at Kean University's Alumni Stadium in Union. "
Most Likely to Succeed: Preparing Our Kids for the Innovation Era.
"How a Newark school went from 'Baghdad' to 'Possibility High'", Fortune (magazine), August 18, 2015. "Principal Mills teamed up with The Future Project, which hired an extraordinary visionary named Divine Bradley.
Bradley is the head Dream Director at Shabazz, and part of the audacious nonprofit called The Future Project. "
[18] The team won the 2006 North II Group III state championships. In the Group III state tournament, the team knocked off North I Group III champion Northern Valley Regional High School at Old Tappan 77–68 in the semifinals, before falling to Hamilton High School 66–34 in the Group III championship game at Rutgers University. [19]
[12] The school had previously participated in the Watchung Conference, which included high schools in Essex County, Hudson County and Union County in northern New Jersey. [13] Varsity sports include basketball, volleyball, track and field, football, soccer, wrestling, golf, baseball and softball. [4]
"
[32] According to Ted Dintersmith and Tony Wagner, the authors of the book Most Likely to Succeed: Preparing Our Kids for the Innovation Era, Divine Bradley of The Future Project and the school's principal, Gemar Mills, worked together to address what they described as one of the "country's most troubled high schools". The school was being considered for closure, and when Mills joined in 2011 there had been four principals in as many years. The city's schools had been part of an unsuccessful $100 million effort to improve the schools.
[24]
"A graduate of Seton Hall University, he taught English and social studies and coached football in Newark at South Side High School (now Malcolm X Shabazz High School). NJSIAA Football Playoff Champions, New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.
Divine reaches out to students on an individual basis and asks, "What's something big and bold you'd like to do with your life to make your world better? I'm here to help you. " [24] Dintersmith and Wagner state that "Most students have never been asked about life goals before. As a result of this kind of engagement, students at Shabazz rise to challenges, take on ambitious projects, and approach education and life with newfound purpose.
" School attendance has improved and students participate in programs during lunch, and outside of school hours, like classes that develop writing, communication, and collaboration skills. [24] Notable alumni [ edit ]
[35]
Originally her last name was Stapleton. While she was still in elementary school, her father, a theatrical agent, booked $1-a-night singing dates for her at nightclubs, company parties and police benefits. At 14 she began singing with the Halsey Miller Orchestra, and after graduating from Southside High School went on the road with little-known bands.
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"As a blossoming basketball star at Malcolm X. Shabazz High School in Newark, Eric Williams was once dubbed -- or anointed, as he likes to put it -- the Prince of New Jersey.
Payne (1934-2012), politician represented New Jersey's 10th congressional district from 1989 to 2012 after working as a teacher and football coach at South Side High School.
