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Norman Public Schools

3.0 (1 review)

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12 years ago

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Norman High School

Norman High School

1.0(1 review)
0.8 mi

I can't believe no one has rated my high school!…read more First of all, when I went to high school back in the dark ages the city of Norman divided up the high school into mid high (9-10th grade) and high school (11-12 grade). They were on completely different campuses. I'm not sure why, but it was rumored to keep senior boys away from freshman girls and reduce the teen pregnancy rate. Oklahoma is a largely Baptist and Republican state, and I don't think sex education was high priority. In fact, there was a separate class where all the pregnant students were taught. They were actually separated from the rest of the students and put in a separate class with a hidden entrance and I can swear this is true because I accidentally opened the door to the class and there were like twenty pregnant girls sitting at desks looking horrified at my discovery, girls we all thought had moved away. Thus actually seems very sad and Salem-like, ouch. This perhaps illustrates how divided the student population was- everyone was in a category. Goths, preps, ropers, jocks, cheerleaders, nerds. It was like the Maginot line, each student group had their own hangout on campus and places to smoke cigarettes if they partook. Yes, we could smoke on campus and you could buy cigarettes in vending machines back in the day! I went to school before the internet, so whatever "alternative culture" existed was found in SPY magazine, weird movies (rented at Blockbuster) and zines. My favorite movies were Gothic, Sid and Nancy, and A Room With a View. My favorite musicians, Morrissey and The Cure. So, obviously a very confused gothic romantic. My friends and I were in an amorphous group, a crossover that fit nowhere. We would walk across the street to La Baguette, Taco Mayo, or Homeland grocery store for snacks but normally I would just go in my car and get the heck out of dodge at lunch for a precious 45 minutes to escape the hell that was Norman High. I was a rebel without a cause, a person who had been displaced from her home up North, "Yankee." I had tried in vain to fit in the first two years after my family moved against my wishes to Oklahoma, (ha! Who asks a 13 year old?!) and I had a permanent chip in my shoulder, a square peg in a round hole. Perhaps my attitude was atrocious, but I despised so much of the small minded provincialism and judgmental Bible belting that my penultimate act of rebellion was getting suspended for three days after telling the cheerleading coach who also doubled as a communications teacher to "F*ck Off" after she told me I was sick and disturbed after reading a poem out loud, as per the assignment- happened to be written by Cure lead singer Robert Smith himself which began, "It doesn't matter if we all die," a polemic against nuclear war. Somehow I survived this place, and it made me even more the stubborn and intransigent person I am today. My mindset then: When you have a curly perm, I'll dye my hair black. If you're reading Seventeen, I'll read the Anarchist's Cookbook. I hated school so much after graduating from NHS it took me 19 years to go back, whereupon in a decade I got an associate's, a Bachelor's, and a doctorate degree. I think I learned the most in the 18 years I was out of school, though. My mindset built at NHS: whatever you tell me I can't do, I'll do it. I found my people who helped me cope with this madhouse, and I wish that maybe I hadn't had quite the edge on me so I could have been more open, but my walls had been fortified for survival. I also have eternal gratitude for my creative writing teacher Ms. Argentos who I adored and made me feel safe to express myself and allowed my love of prose and poetry to flourish. If something is stupid and unfair, I'll fight it. I will outlast and outlive you. And, The First Amendment is my favorite amendment!

TLC Early Learning Center

TLC Early Learning Center

1.5(2 reviews)
0.9 mi

I would say avoid this place at all costs. The amount of money you pay for what you actually get is…read moreridiculous. Our girl was in Pre-School and didn't learn anything new the entire year. She stayed at the same level as she was when she entered in August. Also the fee for "books" for a pre-school age child was a joke. They act like this is a private school instead of a day care, but your child does not receive the education that one would expect from a private school. And I agree with the above comment, if you complain about anything then your child and you are labeled a trouble maker making it impossible to keep the "teachers" accountable. Don't waste your money here.

The trouble started back in the fall when I was supposed to have a parent-teacher conference with…read moremy son's Pre-K teacher. It was cancelled, along with all of her conferences because she was sick. Totally understandable but they never rescheduled them. A week or so later, I get an email from the school administrator saying they thought my son needed to be screened for autism. Uh... all this without talking to ME first. But wait, things just got worse. In the beginning of January (2016), they sent home a survey asking parents to indicate whether their kids were returning to Trinity for the 2016/17 school year. At the bottom, they asked parents to list any suggestions or comments on the back. So, I did. I wrote that I was disappointed with the lack of communication back in the fall regarding my son and his supposed need for autism screening. I said I wished that my cancelled parent-teacher conference had been rescheduled so I could have been in the loop for this discussion. That very day, I got a note home from his teacher saying my son was being disruptive and causing problems. I also got a call from the school administrator about my son causing issues. From then on, it was notes home just about everyday. The worst part is that my son began to HATE going to school. Up until then, I had no problem taking him there in the morning. He never cried or put up a fuss. But from the day I wrote that note, he never wanted to go to school again. He would scream and beg me not to take him. And in the afternoon, a note home about his behavior. So he would then get a punishment and a lecture from me. Something was WRONG with this whole situation - and it wasn't my kid. It became so stressful I decided to withdraw him. So, I sent an email to the administrator (because I wanted it in writing). Still have NEVER heard from her regarding my son's withdrawal. Not even to acknowledge she received my email. Unless you're willing to never complain or offer criticism about your child's education and also have a perfectly behaved child, I would avoid this school. They enroll too many children in the classes and then if a child gets overstimulated or seeks attention (as I suspect was the case with my kiddo) they try to label him/her a problem or special needs child. I don't know what they were doing to make my son hate going there so much so suddenly, but I'm glad he's out now.

Norman Public Schools - elementaryschools - Updated May 2026

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