Horace Greeley High School
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Horace Greeley High School | |
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Address | |
70 Roaring Brook Road Chappaqua, New York 10514 USA |
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Information | |
School type | Public High school |
Motto | "The Lifelong Joy of Learning" |
Established | 1928 (1) |
Opened | 1957 |
School district | Chappaqua Central School District |
School code | 331315 (ACT/SAT/AP) |
Principal | Robert Rhodes |
Staff | 24 |
Faculty | 121.1 FTE (2011–2012)[1] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Number of students | ~1342 |
Student to teacher ratio | 11:6 |
Language | English |
Hours in school day | 6 hrs, 50 minutes |
School color(s) | Blue and Orange |
Athletics conference | Section 1 (NYSPHSAA) |
Mascot | Quaker |
Team name | Quakers |
Average SAT scores | 2040 |
Average ACT scores | 31 |
Newspaper | The Greeley Tribune,
The Quake, ADVO, Satori |
Yearbook | The Quaker |
Communities served | New Castle, New York (part) |
Website | http://hg.ccsd.ws/ |
(1) Originally located on site of Robert E. Bell Middle School serving grades 1-12. The school was relocated to its present site, in its current configuration, in 1957. |
Horace Greeley High School is a public, four-year secondary school serving students in grades 9–12 in Chappaqua, New York. It is part of the Chappaqua Central School District.
Contents
Distinctions
Greeley is nationally respected for its high academic standards. The high school was ranked #46 nationally in the 2008 U.S. News & World Report rankings of "America's Best High Schools," and #7 among those with open enrollment. It currently offers 17 advanced placement courses. Recent years have seen approximately one-tenth of graduating seniors recognized by the National Merit Scholarship committee; the class of 2004 included 25 National Merit semifinalists; the class of 2005 had 16; the class of 2007, 22. The mean SAT score among graduating seniors in the Class of 2012 was a 1927; 623 in Critical Reading, 652 in Mathematics, 652 in Writing; the average ACT score for the class of 2013 was a 29. 97% of the Class of 2005 went on to higher education, 96% to four-year colleges.[2]
The high school is strong in several extracurricular programs. Its academic challenge team won the National Academic Championship in 2003 and 2013, finished third in 2007, 2009 and 2010, and placed among the top six teams at the national tournament in five of the six years between 2000 and 2005.[citation needed]Chip Beall, the organizer of the tournament, noted in 2007 that Greeley's team had "the most airline miles logged at the National Academic Association's expense", a nod to their placement in the final rounds of the tournament more times than any other team in the tournament's history.[3] The Horace Greeley Debate Team has been successful at many regional tournaments as well as national tournaments, and has sent debaters to States every year since its inception in 2002. The Madrigal Choir, a select group of students auditioned from the full chorus, recently attended the prestigious Disney Honors festival in Orlando, Florida and has performed with other choirs at such venues as Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center. In 2011, the Madrigal Choir received a gold award and came in second place at the Boston Heritage Festival.
Programs at Horace Greeley include the LIFE (Learning Independently From Experience) school, an alternative school for grades 11–12 located on campus, and independent study and senior project options.[4] Arts and athletic offerings are extensive, and classes are offered in five foreign languages: Spanish, French, Latin, Chinese, and, at the LIFE school, Italian. The school has been pushed in recent years to eschew more classic languages like French and Latin in favor of more practical ones like Chinese (which is now offered). In the 2014–2015 school year, Spanish, French, Latin and Chinese are offered. In the 2005–2006 school year, Ancient Greek was taught for the first time, as an independent study. Students also have the opportunity to take Syracuse University Project Advance courses in Earth Systems and Forensic Science. Students also have the opportunity to take Marketing and Business & Personal Law for college credit from Mercy College. As of 2013, Greeley has two sister schools in China: Beijing National Day School and Shanghai Yanjing High School and is offering an exchange program for students interested in traveling to China.
Student clubs
The school is named for Horace Greeley, the editor of The New York Tribune who made his home in Chappaqua late in life. One of the school's three main publications, The Greeley Tribune, is an additional tribute to the newsman. The school's other two main publication are The Quake, a full color, student-run sports magazine with a staff of over fifty, making it the school's largest publication, and ADVO, a full color, student-run lifestyle and entertainment magazine.
Other student organizations at Greeley include the Model United Nations, One World Study Circle, community service groups, the largest being S.A.V.E. (Supporting American Veterans Everywhere), S.H.A.R.E., S.A.D.D. (Students Against Destructive Decisions), AAPA (African Anti Poverty Association), Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA), Alliance for Equality (which was the first gay-straight alliance in Westchester), Students for Social Justice, AIDS Awareness, improvisational comedy troupe The Puritans, Silent Earth: Greening Greeley, and Amnesty International.Another very important club at Horace Greeley High School is the Cycling club. This club is seen as the most prestigious of all clubs at Greeley. Peer leadership is also a popular student/faculty run organization on campus that gives older students a chance to help acclimate younger students to the high school environment.
Athletics
Sports are popular on campus and among the diverse offerings are varsity programs in baseball, basketball, bowling, field hockey, American football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, skiing, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and cross country, volleyball, and wrestling. The school's only state championship came in 2002 and was won by the cross country team.[1] That same year the school's football team finished with a record of 11–2 and losing 22–15 to Rochester's Aquinas Institute in the New York State Class A State Championship game.[5] The 2002 Boys' Cross Country team won the Class-B title, and remains the only Greeley sports team to win a state championship.
Campus
The school campus is made up of 11 buildings, all of which are named by letter. Buildings such as the Gym (A Building), Cafeteria (H Building), and Auditorium (B Building) are referred to as such and not by their letter name.[6] Although the building letters span A through L, there is no I Building for unknown reasons. It was once a popular practical joke to tell freshmen that there is in fact an I Building and that it contains a swimming pool and other amenities. However, this practical joke fell out of use with the creation of iLab in E Building, which many jokingly refer to as the new I Building. Multiple athletic fields and a tennis court are also on campus, as well as an observatory.
Notable alumni
- William Ackman (1984), hedge fund investor (Pershing Square Capital Management)[7]
- Charles Ahn (1985), Yale Physics professor
- Adam Arkin (c. 1975), actor
- Nicole Arnaboldi (1976), investment banker
- Dave Arnold (1989), author, mixology innovator, founder of the Museum of Food and Drink
- Knox Burger (1939), editor
- Joe Berlinger (1979), director of the film Some Kind of Monster (2004)
- Robert Berlinger (1976), director
- Bibi Besch, (1959), TV actress seen in multiple Star Trek, Jeff Foxworthy Show, and Falcon Crest episodes
- Dan Bucatinsky, (1983), author, producer, and Emmy-winning actor
- Steve Cohen, (1989), magician and author
- Candy Crowley (1966), CNN's chief political correspondent
- Richie Erenberg (1980), former football player, Pittsburgh Steelers 1984–87
- Roxanne Hart (1969), actress in film and television and on stage – with recurring roles in Dream On, Oz, and Chicago Hope (On the latter series, she played the wife of fellow alumnus Adam Arkin.)
- Susan Hockfield (1969), former president (2004–2012) of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
- Heather Paige Kent (1986), actress, star of That's Life (2000) & The Real Housewives of Orange County, (2012-present)
- Steve Kroft (1963), journalist and correspondent on the TV program 60 Minutes
- James Kwak (1986), blogger and University of Connecticut law professor
- Brian Leiser (1990), alternative musician, member of Fun Lovin' Criminals
- Richard McKelvey (1961), Political scientist
- Jordan Mechner (1981), game designer, creator of the computer game Karateka, the video game Last Express, and the series of Prince of Persia video games[8]
- Dan O'Keefe (1986), TV writer for Seinfeld, famous for introducing Festivus
- Laurence O'Keefe (1987), composer who co-wrote the Tony Award nominated music and lyrics for Legally Blonde: The Musical
- Mark O'Keefe (1989), screenwriter, including Bruce Almighty (2003) and Click (2006)
- Andy Rubin (1981), technology pioneer (hand-held devices), inventor of Android operating system
- Margo Schlanger (1985), former government official and University of Michigan law professor
- Eric Stangel (1989), a head writer and producer of Late Show with David Letterman
- Justin Stangel (1987), a head writer and producer of Late Show with David Letterman
- Kevin Wade (1972), screenwriter
- Chris Williams (1985), actor
- Dar Williams (1985), folk-pop singer-songwriter[9]
- Vanessa L. Williams (1981), model, actress and singer[10][11]
References
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External links
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