Grimsley High School - Clubs

Clubs

Grimsley actively encourages students to join some of the many clubs offered. Many of these clubs are started and run by the students themselves. While student-created clubs result in many different clubs that represent a wide area of activities, oftentimes these clubs disintegrate after the founder or president leaves.

Some of the many clubs currently offered at Grimsley include:

  • Speech and Debate Club
  • Multicultural Club
  • Student Human Relations Commission
  • Student Ambassadors
  • Hebrew Club
  • Latin Club
  • Grimsley Ladies Achieving More
  • Chess Club
  • Brooks Buddies
  • Lunch Buddies
  • Cross Club
  • Creative Writing Club
  • Table Tennis Club
  • Science Olympiad
  • FIRST robotics
  • Young Life
  • Grimsley Dance Club
  • Global Citizen Corps
  • World Studies
  • ICC (Inter-Club Council)
  • Amnesty International
  • Tri-M Music Honors Society
  • Torchlight chapter, National Honor Society
  • National Art Honor Society
  • Model United Nations
  • Handball Club
  • Spanish Club
  • G.E.E.K (A club that plays video games and hosts tournaments)
  • T.A.G.S (Teens Active in Greensboro Service)
  • French Club
  • Ultimate Frisbee Club
  • Book Club
  • Poetry Club
  • Philosophy Club
  • FBLA (Future Business Leaders of America)
  • DECA
  • Anime Club

Interested students need to keep an eye on the slideshow and tune in to WHRL, as it is the only place where you can really be notified of clubs that are actively meeting.

Read more about this topic:  Grimsley High School

Famous quotes containing the word clubs:

    Remember that the peer group is important to young adolescents, and there’s nothing wrong with that. Parents are often just as important, however. Don’t give up on the idea that you can make a difference.
    —The Lions Clubs International and the Quest Nation. The Surprising Years, I, ch.5 (1985)

    Women realize that we are living in an ungoverned world. At heart we are all pacifists. We should love to talk it over with the war-makers, but they would not understand. Words are so inadequate, and we realize that the hatred must kill itself; so we give our men gladly, unselfishly, proudly, patriotically, since the world chooses to settle its disputes in the old barbarous way.
    —General Federation Of Women’s Clubs (GFWC)

    It is always a practical difficulty with clubs to regulate the laws of election so as to exclude peremptorily every social nuisance. Nobody wishes bad manners. We must have loyalty and character.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)