Pros:
When you drive into the school and park, walk away from the road you drove in on, past the covered basketball court and walk up along side the building on the left and you'll find the small white sign that says tee one. Quick note regarding the tee pad for hole four; it's the same as the tee for hole one with a faint outline telling you so but easy to miss JR (the previous reviewer) did, now you know. Throwing off of the first tee aim for the basket on the left of the two in sight, it's the one under the trees. The rest of the course is self explanatory both for navigation and for achieving birdies.
This is a fun course for safari and even has a large grass field if you get bored and want to (and have the arm for it) throw goal post to goal post on the shared activity (football) field. You can turn short holes into long holes, etc. Great for a middle school and some wham-o type frisbees but leave the sharp stuff at home.
Although the layout is strange and there wasn't much to work with (more on this in the cons section below) the few trees and terrain changes (tiny hills/valleys) were used fairly well. The holes here make you think a little more beyond "throw it in this open field to the basket" like so many 'pitch n putt' style courses do.
Cons:
It's short so it's obviously not a champion level course and not challenging even with SuperClass discs. The flow is wonky and the two worst holes on the course (two and three) take you farther from the rest of the course for no purpose other than to meet a multiple of three to get us to a magical number of six.
On hole one a bad skip or just a disc that lost steam and headed into a hyzer dive could break the windows on the doors to the left of hole one; not sure if whomever designed it knows that but it's done now, moving on.
Hole two you are throwing from a raised tee with a slightly low ceiling to a basket near a fence and the other side grown over with sticker bushes. I did not see a gate to the other side so you're jumping a fence into stickers to get your plastic back! Hole three is right in front of the building and could be dangerous.
If you want to beat in your discs there is tons of concrete, and buildings to slam them up against but if you're not playing with premium plastic get ready to break out the tweezers and sandpaper.
Gotta love the number plate facing the wrong direction!
If anything else is going on like school or an event near the track/field good luck on playing the course!!!
Just not enough obstacles and not much to work with here.
Other Thoughts:
It seem there are lots of these courses that pop up every now and again that you just hear of but have been there for years judging on the state of the course or baskets. Some of these courses may never have seen a disc golfer playing them and many are yet to be discovered. Funny that schools and churches put in these courses without contacting someone who knows a thing about course design or the game in general. I'm assuming most of these "designers" have either never played and only heard about it or saw it played once or played it once themselves. Don't get me wrong I'm glad they think of out sport instead of something else it just seems strange to me.