Franklin High School (New Jersey) - Extracurricular Activities

Extracurricular Activities

Extracurricular activities provide an excellent medium for FHS students to explore their interests, learn, and help the community. Most "clubs" meet after school when additional buses are available for after school transportation. Some clubs such as Brass Ensemble, Guitar Ensemble, and Model United Nations meet at night, in which cases the students are responsible for their own transportation. Clubs offered at Franklin High School include:
Note: Some information may be inaccurate due to clubs forming or dissipating late in the year and sparse updates for the website.

  • Academic League
  • Amnesty International
  • Africa and the Islands United
  • Art Club
  • Asian Awareness
  • Brass Ensemble
  • Chess Club
  • Colorguard (Band)
  • Colorguard (JROTC)
  • Crescent Club
  • Dance Ensemble
  • DECA
  • Drama Group
  • Environmental Club
  • FIRST Robotics Club
  • Future Business Leaders of America
  • FEA
  • French Club
  • French National Honor Society
  • GSA
  • Gospel Choir
  • Guitar Ensemble
  • Jazz Ensemble
  • Junior Classical League
  • Key Club
  • Literary Club
  • Madrigal Singers
  • Marching Band
  • Math League
  • Model United Nations
  • National Honor Society
  • Odyssey of the Mind
  • Percussion Ensemble
  • Project Success
  • Raritan Introduction of Minorities to Engineering (R.I.M.E.)
  • REBEL
  • Rotary Interact
  • Science League
  • Spanish Club
  • Stock Market Club
  • Student Council/Government
  • T.A.T.U.
  • The Warrior (School Newspaper)
  • The Shield (Yearbook Club)
  • Ultimate Warriors
  • Video Club
  • Youth Council

Read more about this topic:  Franklin High School (New Jersey)

Famous quotes containing the word activities:

    The most remarkable aspect of the transition we are living through is not so much the passage from want to affluence as the passage from labor to leisure.... Leisure contains the future, it is the new horizon.... The prospect then is one of unremitting labor to bequeath to future generations a chance of founding a society of leisure that will overcome the demands and compulsions of productive labor so that time may be devoted to creative activities or simply to pleasure and happiness.
    Henri Lefebvre (b. 1901)