Monroe ohio schools: Home – Monroe Local Schools

Опубликовано: August 4, 2023 в 7:37 am

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Категории: Miscellaneous

Monroe Local School District (2023)

Top Rankings
Overview
District Rank
Students by Ethnicity
Students by Grade
District Revenue and Spending
Frequently Asked Questions

Top Rankings

Monroe Local School District ranks among the top 20% of public school district in Ohio for:

Category

Attribute

Overall Rank

Highest overall rank (Top 20%)

Math Proficiency

Highest math proficiency (Top 20%)

Reading/Language Arts Proficiency

Highest reading/language arts proficiency (Top 20%)

Community Size

Largest student body (number of students) (Top 1%)

For the 2023 school year, there are 4 public schools serving 2,759 students in Monroe Local School District. This district’s average testing ranking is 9/10, which is in the top 20% of public schools in Ohio.

Public Schools in Monroe Local School District have an average math proficiency score of 67% (versus the Ohio public school average of 50%), and reading proficiency score of 73% (versus the 57% statewide average).

Minority enrollment is 23% of the student body (majority Hispanic), which is less than the Ohio public school average of 32% (majority Black).

Overview

District Rank

Monroe Local School District, which is ranked within the top 20% of all 897 school districts in Ohio (based off of combined math and reading proficiency testing data) for the 2020-2021 school year.

The school district’s graduation rate of 94% has increased from 90-94% over five school years.

Students by Ethnicity:

Students by Grade:

District Revenue and Spending

The revenue/student of $11,926 in this school district is less than the state median of $15,783. The school district revenue/student has stayed relatively flat over four school years.

The school district’s spending/student of $10,223 is less than the state median of $14,829. The school district spending/student has stayed relatively flat over four school years.

Best Monroe Local School District Public Schools (2023)

School (Math and Reading Proficiency)

Location

Grades

Students

Rank: #11.

Monroe Elementary School

Math: 75% | Reading: 73%
Rank:

Top 20%

Add to Compare

230 Yankee Rd
Monroe, OH 45050
(513) 539-8101

Grades: 2-6

| 1,051 students

Rank: #22.

Monroe Junior High School

Math: 63% | Reading: 70%
Rank:

Top 30%

Add to Compare

220 Yankee Rd
Monroe, OH 45050
(513) 539-8471

Grades: 7-8

| 505 students

Rank: #33.

Monroe High School

Math: 45-49% | Reading: 76%
Rank:

Top 50%

Add to Compare

220 Yankee Rd
Monroe, OH 45050
(513) 539-8471

Grades: 9-12

| 761 students

Rank: n/an/a

Monroe Primary School

Add to Compare

225 Macready Ave
Monroe, OH 45050
(513) 360-0700

Grades: PK-1

| 442 students

Frequently Asked Questions

How many schools belong to Monroe Local School District?

Monroe Local School District manages 4 public schools serving 2,759 students.

What is the rank of Monroe Local School District?

Monroe Local School District is ranked #148 out of 897 school districts in Ohio (top 20%) based off of combined math and reading proficiency testing data for the 2020-2021 school year. This district ranks in the top 20% of Ohio school districts for: Highest overall rank (Top 20%), Highest math proficiency (Top 20%), Highest reading/language arts proficiency (Top 20%) and Largest student body (number of students) (Top 1%)

What is the racial composition of students in Monroe Local School District?

77% of Monroe Local School District students are White, 10% of students are Hispanic, 5% of students are Black, 5% of students are Two or more races, and 3% of students are Asian.

What is the student/teacher ratio of Monroe Local School District?

Monroe Local School District has a student/teacher ratio of 22:1, which is higher than the Ohio state average of 17:1.

What is Monroe Local School District’s spending/student ratio?

The school district’s spending/student of $10,223 is less than the state median of $14,829. The school district spending/student has stayed relatively flat over four school years.

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Colleges & Universities Near Monroe, Ohio

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  • Job Outlook
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Looking for information about the best colleges and universities in Monroe? Here’s your guide to the top schools offering degrees within 20 miles of Monroe, Ohio.

There are at least 8 colleges serving the area, including 5 private colleges and universities, 3 public colleges and universities, and 0 community colleges offering 2-year degrees.

Read on to get a breakdown of the colleges serving Monroe, with details about cost, enrollment, student type and degree offerings.


Monroe, Ohio Colleges by the Numbers

Degrees have been growing at institutions near Monroe, Ohio
over the past 5 years. In 2021, students completed 3,953 degree programs at colleges and universities near Monroe. That was an increase of
12% from completions reported in 2017.

Estimate derived from 2021 completion data.


Top School For Adults & Online Students

Franklin University is a top choice for transfer students, online learners and adults who need to balance school with busy lives. Founded
in 1902, Franklin’s main focus has been serving adult students and tailoring education to fit their
needs. Nonprofit and regionally-accredited by the Higher Learning Commission (HLC), Franklin offers more than 50 bachelor’s, master’s, and
doctoral programs — all available 100% online.


Private Colleges & Universities Offering Degrees Near Monroe, Ohio

There are at least 8 schools offering degrees near Monroe, Ohio, and 5
are four-year private colleges or universities where about 5,531 undergraduate students were enrolled.
In 2021, a total of 2,459 degrees were completed at
private colleges and universities, including 1,934 that were offered online.

Franklin offers more than 50 online bachelor’s degrees, master’s degrees and doctoral
programs in the Monroe, Ohio area.
Franklin University is an accredited nonprofit 4-year school where most students attend
classes part-time. Most of the students are adults and all
programs completed were offered online.
Bachelor’s degrees are the most popular at Franklin University.
In 2021, 1,056 bachelor’s degrees were completed. In addition,
106 associate degrees, 638 master’s degrees, and 19 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support ServicesAssociate94Bachelor’s681Master’s408Doctoral9

Computer and Information Sciences and Support ServicesAssociate9Bachelor’s78Master’s17Doctoral0

Communication, Journalism, and Related ProgramsAssociate1Bachelor’s22Master’s0Doctoral0

Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Firefighting and Related Protective ServicesAssociate2Bachelor’s54Master’s13Doctoral0

Multi/Interdisciplinary StudiesAssociate0Bachelor’s0Master’s6Doctoral0

Parks, Recreation, Leisure, Fitness, and KinesiologyAssociate0Bachelor’s20Master’s0Doctoral0

Natural Resources and ConservationAssociate0Bachelor’s2Master’s0Doctoral0

Public Administration and Social Service ProfessionsAssociate0Bachelor’s4Master’s37Doctoral0

Visual and Performing ArtsAssociate0Bachelor’s17Master’s0Doctoral0

Social SciencesAssociate0Bachelor’s18Master’s0Doctoral0

EducationAssociate0Bachelor’s11Master’s10Doctoral1

Mathematics and StatisticsAssociate0Bachelor’s1Master’s0Doctoral0

PsychologyAssociate0Bachelor’s39Master’s56Doctoral0

Health Professions and Related ProgramsAssociate0Bachelor’s109Master’s91Doctoral9

Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science is an accredited nonprofit 4-year school where most students attend
classes full-time. Most of the students are a mixture of traditional and adult aged and no
programs completed were offered online.
Bachelor’s degrees are the most popular at Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science.
In 2021, 68 bachelor’s degrees were completed. In addition,
14 associate degrees, 0 master’s degrees, and 0 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Culinary, Entertainment, and Personal ServicesAssociate14Bachelor’s68Master’s0Doctoral0

Galen College of Nursing-Cincinnati is an accredited for profit 4-year school where most students attend
classes part-time. Most of the students are a mixture of traditional and adult aged and no
programs completed were offered online.
Associate degrees are the most popular at Galen College of Nursing-Cincinnati.
In 2021, 222 associate degrees were completed. In addition,
4 bachelor’s degrees, 0 master’s degrees, and 0 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Health Professions and Related ProgramsAssociate222Bachelor’s4Master’s0Doctoral0

Kettering College is an accredited nonprofit 4-year school where most students attend
classes full-time. Most of the students are a mixture of traditional and adult aged and some
programs completed were offered online.
Bachelor’s degrees are the most popular at Kettering College.
In 2021, 147 bachelor’s degrees were completed. In addition,
24 associate degrees, 57 master’s degrees, and 29 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Health Professions and Related ProgramsAssociate24Bachelor’s147Master’s57Doctoral29

The Art Institute of Ohio-Cincinnati is a non-accredited
for profit 4-year school where most students attend
classes full-time. Most of the students are of
traditional age and no
programs completed were offered online.
Bachelor’s degrees are the most popular at The Art Institute of Ohio-Cincinnati.
In 2021, 59 bachelor’s degrees were completed. In addition,
16 associate degrees, 0 master’s degrees, and 0 doctoral degrees were earned.


Public Colleges & Universities Near Monroe, Ohio

There are 3
four-year public colleges located near Monroe, Ohio . About 8,397 students
were enrolled in undergraduate programs, and about 1,494 degrees were completed at public colleges near Monroe.
Tuition shown reflects in-state rates.

University of Cincinnati-Blue Ash College is an accredited public 4-year school where most students attend
classes full-time. Most of the students are of
traditional age and minimal
programs completed were offered online.
Associate degrees are the most popular at University of Cincinnati-Blue Ash College.
In 2021, 746 associate degrees were completed. In addition,
46 bachelor’s degrees, 0 master’s degrees, and 0 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support ServicesAssociate173Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Agricultural/Animal/Plan/Veterinary Science and Related FieldsAssociate22Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Parks, Recreation, Leisure, Fitness, and KinesiologyAssociate13Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Natural Resources and ConservationAssociate7Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Public Administration and Social Service ProfessionsAssociate16Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

English Language and Literature/LettersAssociate5Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Computer and Information Sciences and Support ServicesAssociate39Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

HistoryAssociate2Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Visual and Performing ArtsAssociate26Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Communication, Journalism, and Related ProgramsAssociate48Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Physical SciencesAssociate13Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

EducationAssociate34Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Biological and Biomedical SciencesAssociate28Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Communications Technologies/Technicians and Support ServicesAssociate30Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

PsychologyAssociate41Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Health Professions and Related ProgramsAssociate160Bachelor’s23Master’s0Doctoral0

Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Firefighting and Related Protective ServicesAssociate44Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Liberal Arts and Sciences, General Studies and HumanitiesAssociate45Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Multi/Interdisciplinary StudiesAssociate0Bachelor’s23Master’s0Doctoral0

Miami University-Hamilton is an accredited public 4-year school where most students attend
classes full-time. Most of the students are of
traditional age and some
programs completed were offered online.
Bachelor’s degrees are the most popular at Miami University-Hamilton.
In 2021, 363 bachelor’s degrees were completed. In addition,
92 associate degrees, 1 master’s degree, and 0 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support ServicesAssociate21Bachelor’s80Master’s0Doctoral0

Engineering/Engineering-Related Technologies/TechniciansAssociate12Bachelor’s57Master’s0Doctoral0

Computer and Information Sciences and Support ServicesAssociate13Bachelor’s27Master’s0Doctoral0

EducationAssociate4Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Firefighting and Related Protective ServicesAssociate4Bachelor’s34Master’s1Doctoral0

Liberal Arts and Sciences, General Studies and HumanitiesAssociate38Bachelor’s31Master’s0Doctoral0

Public Administration and Social Service ProfessionsAssociate0Bachelor’s9Master’s0Doctoral0

English Language and Literature/LettersAssociate0Bachelor’s18Master’s0Doctoral0

Visual and Performing ArtsAssociate0Bachelor’s7Master’s0Doctoral0

Communication, Journalism, and Related ProgramsAssociate0Bachelor’s17Master’s0Doctoral0

Biological and Biomedical SciencesAssociate0Bachelor’s5Master’s0Doctoral0

PsychologyAssociate0Bachelor’s29Master’s0Doctoral0

Health Professions and Related ProgramsAssociate0Bachelor’s49Master’s0Doctoral0

Miami University-Middletown is an accredited public 4-year school where most students attend
classes full-time. Most of the students are of
traditional age and some
programs completed were offered online.
Bachelor’s degrees are the most popular at Miami University-Middletown.
In 2021, 182 bachelor’s degrees were completed. In addition,
64 associate degrees, 0 master’s degrees, and 0 doctoral degrees were earned.

Completions by Program

AssociateBachelor’sMaster’sDoctoral

Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support ServicesAssociate8Bachelor’s85Master’s0Doctoral0

Engineering/Engineering-Related Technologies/TechniciansAssociate9Bachelor’s13Master’s0Doctoral0

Computer and Information Sciences and Support ServicesAssociate3Bachelor’s8Master’s0Doctoral0

EducationAssociate5Bachelor’s0Master’s0Doctoral0

Homeland Security, Law Enforcement, Firefighting and Related Protective ServicesAssociate2Bachelor’s11Master’s0Doctoral0

Liberal Arts and Sciences, General Studies and HumanitiesAssociate37Bachelor’s8Master’s0Doctoral0

Public Administration and Social Service ProfessionsAssociate0Bachelor’s1Master’s0Doctoral0

English Language and Literature/LettersAssociate0Bachelor’s6Master’s0Doctoral0

Visual and Performing ArtsAssociate0Bachelor’s2Master’s0Doctoral0

Communication, Journalism, and Related ProgramsAssociate0Bachelor’s12Master’s0Doctoral0

Biological and Biomedical SciencesAssociate0Bachelor’s2Master’s0Doctoral0

PsychologyAssociate0Bachelor’s8Master’s0Doctoral0

Health Professions and Related ProgramsAssociate0Bachelor’s26Master’s0Doctoral0


Affordable Colleges Near Monroe, Ohio

Wondering what you can expect to pay for a degree near Monroe, Ohio, or which Monroe schools have
the most affordable options? According to undergraduate tuition data from the U. S. Department of Education College Scorecard, the average
tuition at Monroe-area’s 4-year nonprofit schools is $8,557. The average tuition at 4-year for-profit
schools near Monroe is N/A, while tuition at 2-year online colleges and universities is N/A.


Accredited
Colleges Serving Monroe, Ohio

Earning a college degree is an investment — and earning a college degree from an accredited university is one of the best ways to ensure your
education is of high quality. Accredited universities are held to rigorous standards by state and regional bodies and undergo regular reviews
to verify that their processes and academic programs meet the proper standards.

Wondering if a certain college or university offering degree programs in Monroe, Ohio is accredited? View a list of
accredited colleges and universities serving Monroe, Ohio here. We’ve made it easy to find your school by breaking down the list by school type.

  • Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science
  • Miami University-Middletown
  • University of Cincinnati-Blue Ash College
  • Kettering College
  • Miami University-Hamilton
  • Franklin University
  • Galen College of Nursing-Cincinnati

Monroe, Ohio Job Market & Opportunities

What happens after you earn your college degree in Monroe? What’s the Monroe, Ohio job market outlook? Get a snapshot of jobs and careers, including annual job openings, median earnings and more.

In 2021, there were about 1,130,030 jobs in the Monroe, Ohio area. From 2020-2021, job growth in Monroe was below the national average, at 1.3%. There were 126,730 job openings in the area. In terms of earnings, workers in Monroe do better than the national average, with an average hourly pay of $20. 48.


Find Degree Progams Near Monroe, Ohio

Accounting
Business Administration
Communication
Criminal Justice Administration
Education & Teaching
Entrepreneurship
High School Education & Teaching
Human Resources Management
Information Technology
Marketing
Middle School Education & Teaching
Nursing (RN-BSN & BSN)
Psychology
Secondary Education & Teaching
Sport Management

A teenager shot classmates in the name of Marilyn Manson

Disturbing news has been coming from American schools in the last two days. In Ohio, a 14-year-old teenager, having arranged a shooting at a school, injured four people and took his own life. An armory is found in the home of another teenager in Pennsylvania, with which he is believed to have also planned to arrange a massacre at his school.

The SuccessTech Academy public school in Cleveland, Ohio is considered to be a highly advanced educational institution. She specializes in in-depth study of business and advanced technologies. All of its graduates correspond to the level of college applicants. The school is funded by a grant from Microsoft CEO Bill Gates and his wife Melinda. And they enter it on a competitive basis.

On Wednesday at one fifteen in the afternoon, 14-year-old Asa Kun, a student at this school, walked through the door holding a revolver in each hand. He did it unhindered because the only school security guard was on time off. Asa was not supposed to come to school that day, because the day before the administration suspended him from classes for a fight with a classmate, during which he tried to prove to a friend that one should not worship God, but Marilyn Manson, the leader of the super extravagant rock band of the same name.

The disciplinary action embittered him even more and, as they now recall, he publicly declared: “Well, then I’ll arrange it for you!” Further – the familiar scenario – shooting at school. After injuring two teachers and two schoolmates, Asa Kun committed suicide before the police arrived. Revolvers of 22 and 38 calibers, a box of cartridges and three knives were found next to his corpse. Kuhn himself was wearing a Marilyn Manson T-shirt.

At school, Eisa-kun was considered an out-of-this-world guy and a bully. But on that day, no one could have imagined that he would shoot. “We already knew that he showed up on our floor,” says one of his classmates, Michael Brown. But in fact no one took him seriously. His arrival made everyone happy. Nobody thought anything would happen. Everyone was playing with their cell phones, giggling and chatting. But then shots rang out, and I threw myself under the table. Hiding my head behind my briefcase, I called my mother and said that I love her and that we have a shooting going on here.

“I was going up from the third floor to the fourth when a crowd of guys rushed towards me, shouting something like “Oh my God!”, 17-year-old Darnell Rogers, one of the injured Asa Kuhn, describes the experience. – Thinking that there was just a fight going on, I went to my personal locker in the hallway. But then I heard shots, and I decided to take cover in the classroom, but the next moment a bullet grazed my knee. At first, I didn’t even realize that I was wounded, because I was more worried about the fate of my sister and cousin, who were students at the same school.”

Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath told an emergency press conference that investigating the bloody drama at the school would take time: “We don’t know much yet. We know that the shooter had problems with school discipline, as well as disagreements with other students. Only a poll of these guys, which requires a certain amount of time, will help to establish the true motives of Asa Kun coming to school with weapons. But still, we tend to think that it was not random shooting. We believe that he deliberately shot at some. He entered a certain classroom and, bumping into a teacher, shot him. Then he went in search of another teacher. After some time, he fired several shots at the teacher who was helping the children to leave the floor.”

The Cleveland Police Chief pointed out the unfavorable background that preceded Wednesday’s incident. Last Friday there was a bomb alert at the school that turned out to be false. Over the past year, the police recorded 15 different incidents at this school, including bringing a pump-action shotgun into its territory. It also turned out that Asa Kun’s family often had family scandals. He himself was arrested by the police at the age of 12 for beating his own mother.

Professor of criminology at Northeastern University in Boston, Jack Levin, believes that it was the underestimation of the adolescent’s dysfunctional family environment by educators that played a fatal role in this case: “There are always missed alarm signals. They begin to understand their meaning only in hindsight. Every time after a shooting in our schools, everyone suddenly begins to see clearly and remembers that there were dangerous symptoms. But the problem is that today such symptoms apply to a huge number of teenagers. Many of the young people who opened fire hated their school or worshiped Marilyn Manson. They are in the unmanageable category. In my opinion, the best indicator that such teenagers will bring trouble is the facts of previous incidents accompanied by violence. Asa Kun was just in that category. Simply put, you should pay special attention to a difficult teenager because something oppresses him, and not because he brings trouble.

The day after the Cleveland massacre, Pennsylvania officials reported the arrest of a 14-year-old student at Plymouth Whitemarsh High School in suburban Philadelphia. It comes after the search of the teenager’s home, which turned up an arsenal of weapons, including a 9mm rifle with a laser sight, dozens of pump-action shotguns, semi-assembled hand grenades, as well as equipment and instructions for making them. In addition, the boy kept a homemade Nazi flag and a video of the mass shooting of his comrades by two schoolchildren at Columbine High School in Colorado at 1999 year. The teen’s name has not been released. Information about the arsenal came from a classmate of the arrested person.

After the Columbine High School massacre, school shootings in the United States continue to be a serious problem. The most bloody episode was the use of firearms on April 16 this year at VirginiaTech University, 450 kilometers south of the American capital. On that day, a mentally ill 23-year-old student, Cho Sen Hu, shot 27 of his comrades and five teachers.

23 facts about Marilyn Manson

Artem Afanasiev 01/05/2016 27 479
In this article: Marilyn Manson

Photo:
Ilya Dunaev

Refreshed the memory of interesting things from the life of the artist and his band

American musician, artist and journalist, the eternal irritant of all kinds of “guardians of morality” and just a charming personality – all this is Marilyn Manson.

  1. Manson’s real name is Brian Hugh Warner. He was born in 1969 in Canton, Ohio, the son of a furniture dealer and a nurse. Over the years, his mother, Barbara, still calls her son Brian, but his father, Hugh, calls the offspring Manson.
  2. Brian’s pseudonym is a combination of the name of a beautiful actress (Marilyn Monroe) and the name of mass murderer Charles Manson. In the future, the musician’s colleagues in the band will create stage names for themselves according to the same principle. The artist himself explained this by the desire to maintain balance, the status quo – he took part of the pseudonym from Marilyn, whom the world adored, and took the other part from Charles, whom the world hated.
  3. Before forming a band with guitarist Scott Mitchell Putesky (who took the pseudonym “Daisy Berkowitz”), Warner worked as a music journalist in Tampa Bay, Florida.
  4. Since 1998 lives in Hollywood.
  5. Warner and Putesky’s original band was called Marilyn Manson and the Spooky Kids.
  6. Nine Inch Nails leader Trent Reznor developed an interest in Manson and his band in the early 1990s. Trent offered the guys a contract with Nothing Records, and also allowed them to open NIN shows. All this contributed to a serious increase in the popularity of the Marilyn Manson team.
  7. Reznor’s complacency was taken advantage of by the young group. The guys began to shock the public very quickly. So, the frontman was awarded the title of “Reverend” by the Church of Satanists, when during a show in Salt Lake City, Utah, he tore up a copy of the Book of Mormon right on stage.
  8. A variety of religious and conservative groups and organizations took the musician seriously over time. After the Columbine massacre in April 1999, Warner-Manson came under heavy fire from them. Out of harm’s way, he canceled his Rock Is Dead tour.
  9. Organizations leading protests against Manson and his group included The American Family Association and Empower America. Many cities around the country tried to ban Marilyn Manson concerts, but only sometimes the attempts were crowned with success.
  10. Manson calls himself “mama’s boy”. He wears a T-shirt that says “Kill Your Parents” but claims it’s just sarcasm. In fact, his parents never bullied him and still support him in everything.
  11. When Manson was a little boy, someone broke into the Warner family’s house and tried to suffocate the child with a pillow. The musician does not remember the criminal, but since then he can only fall asleep when the TV is on.
  12. Parents sent Manson to a Christian school when he was 5 years old. There, the future infamous rocker and other children were trying to demonstrate music that they should not listen to and turn the youth away from it. In the case of Brian Warner, the effect was the opposite – he fell in love with “forbidden” tunes.
  13. At Christian School, Manson started creating a magazine to make life and learning less boring. He called his brainchild “Stupid”.
  14. Manson hates sports but lost his virginity at the age of 16 on a baseball field with a female cheerleader.