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Mission & Vision
About Us
Mission
To educate, nurture and inspire thinkers, leaders and life-long learners.
Vision
The Long Mill community will empower our students to become active leaders who will take ownership of their future in a global society.
News & Events
Long Mill News and Events
Mrs. Devin Ward, a first grade teacher at LOMES, was recently named teacher of the year for 2023-24.
Spring picture day is Wednesday April 10th.
Report Cards will be sent home on April 9, 2024.
NC Check-in ELA - 3/20/24
NC Check-in Science - 3/21/24
Progress Reports will be sent home on Wednesday February 21, 2024.
Help our teacher's restock their classrooms.
Long Mill Elementary held its annual winter concert last night. Violin students performed, and a special visitor greeted students.
NC Check-In for Math will be on Tuesday November 14th.
First Grade will be going on a field trip on Thursday November 16th.
The school not only fosters a fantastic and enjoyable learning environment but it also achieved remarkable growth during the past school year.
Long Mill Elementary Career Day: Inspiring Tomorrow's Leaders Today!
Upcoming Events
April
Our Beliefs
We believe in Community. We believe in Diversity. We believe in Respect. We believe in Integrity. We believe in Excellence.
Franklin County is growing. We can anecdotally recognize this by observing housing developments cropping up around the county, hearing stories of houses selling the day that they go on the market, etc. Data provided by the Franklin County Economic Development Council bears this out as well, with a projected annual growth rate of up to 2.5%.
As a PreK-12 public school system, every school-aged resident of Franklin County has a place in our district. Although charter schools limit the students who may enroll with a lottery process, we welcome each and every child and we work to meet the academic, behavioral, and social development needs of all students.
As a district, we also recognize that it is important that students learn from their mistakes, and implementation of restorative practices can be powerful in conjunction with standard disciplinary consequences. This can be as simple as having a student acknowledge their behavior and taking a positive action- for instance, apologizing for taking something that didn’t belong to them or for saying something hurtful to someone else.
The important work of educating the students of Franklin County continues each and every day. The past two years have been challenging for us all, and we have wanted nothing more than a shift to normalcy. Despite our best efforts, students have had a disrupted educational experience that has created gaps that we continue to work to fill. They have needs that extend beyond academics and our schools have worked to support those efforts as well.
FCS Strategic Blueprint: Preparing FCS Students for College, Career and Life Beyond the Classroom