The original building for Monroe Township High School, designed to serve 1,100 students, was constructed at a cost of $4.7 million (equivalent to $ million in ). Groundbreaking for the new facility was held in July 1971 after a bond issue to cover the costs of the building was approved by voters in May 1971. Students started using the building in January 1974. The
New Jersey Board of Education voted in May 1979 to shutdown
Jamesburg High School, which with an enrollment of 182 students was the smallest in the state. Starting with the 1979-80 school year, Jamesburg began sending students to Monroe Township High School. The Marasco Center for the Performing Arts, named for a former superintendent, was constructed at a cost of $2.5 million and added to the high school in the mid-1990s, which added an auditorium of 1,000 seats. More classrooms were added in the early 2000s. In 1996, the
New Jersey Department of Education revised the elementary school core curriculum to require foreign language classes. In mid-October 1999 the district sent a questionnaire to 13,000 houses regarding what language should be taught to elementary students. The district received 458 back. 271 of those questionnaires chose Spanish, 96 of the returned questionnaires indicated a preference for
Mandarin Chinese and the remaining 91 requested other languages that included Latin, Russian, and English itself. Stephen E. Derkoski, the assistant superintendent, stated that "We can't ignore" that residents had a preference of Spanish over Chinese on a 3 to 1 basis. In November 1999, the school board voted 7–1 to designate Spanish as the foreign language used in elementary schools. With the completion of the $125 million project to create a new building for the new high school, the previous high school building (across the street from the current one) was turned into the township's middle school, and what was called "Applegarth Middle School" was converted into an elementary school building. The district had been classified by the
New Jersey Department of Education as being in
District Factor Group "FG", the fourth highest of eight groupings. District Factor Groups organize districts statewide to allow comparison by common
socioeconomic characteristics of the local districts. From lowest socioeconomic status to highest, the categories are A, B, CD, DE, FG, GH, I and J. ==Awards and recognition==