By Addison Montoya At Captain Shreve and all Caddo Parish Schools, students are required to have a certain amount of minutes spent in the classroom for instruction. Administrators make a big deal about the amount of time that can or
By Addison Montoya In September 2023, the Captain Shreve administrators decided to only allow hoodies from November 1st through April 1st, but that is no April Fool’s joke. Unfortunately, many students wear hoodies even when they are not supposed to.
By Addison Montoya On the morning of March 28th, a Captain Shreve student brought a weapon to school. Later, that weapon was identified as an AR-15. Neither the students nor the teachers were alerted. Many were not even aware of
By Addison Montoya The girl’s restrooms at Captain Shreve are in constant use. Not only is the bathroom used all day but it is necessary since most students are at school for at least eight hours. Lots of students go
By Alexis Johnson-Williams At the age of 16, a person can obtain a license and legally drive. When entering high school, almost every student wants to start driving, having the freedom of going anywhere (anywhere = wherever your parents want
By David Soberanes-Rivera This Thursday, the 7th of March, was not only awkward for students, but for some teachers as well. It started with the pre-coding for Juniors, and staying in the gym for the rest who showed up in
By Roman McDonald Teachers are the foundation for students to get an education at school, and use some of the skills they learn in their future jobs and careers. We already know that as students we can feel under the
By Alexis Johnson-Williams The Student Section is responsible for cheering on the players on the field. Students fill the bleachers shouting chants and cheers directed from the leaders below. Student Section leaders are chosen to lead hundreds in cheering on
By Roman McDonald Captain Shreve holds up to around 2,000 students for the 2023- 2024 school year, but that many kids only means that traffic might be an annoyance. With the layout of Shreve with the total number of students,
The Enterprise’s view on the issue of disrespect in the classroom. By Maddison Reynolds Captain Shreve struggles with the overgrowing rate of disruptive students. During class, some students have been reported to be disrespectful and argumentative towards teachers and other