South Windsor High School
South Windsor High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
161 Nevers Road , 06074 United States | |
Coordinates | 41°50′32″N 72°33′16″W / 41.8421°N 72.5545°W |
Information | |
Type | Public |
School district | South Windsor Public Schools |
Superintendent | Kate Carter |
Principal | Daniel P. Sullivan III |
Faculty | 116 (2014) |
Grades | 9-12 |
Number of students | 1,364 (2017) [1] |
Color(s) | Maroon and Gold |
Team name | Bobcat |
Website | SWHS Homepage |
South Windsor High School is located in South Windsor, Connecticut. It currently serves grades 9-12 with approximately 1,364 students and a 13:1 student-teacher ratio. It is the only high school in South Windsor, but also admits students from Hartford through the Open Choice Program. The school offers a variety of courses spanning departments such as mathematics, science, social studies, language arts, foreign languages, music, art, and technology. The school also offers 60 options for extracurricular activities and 30 options for afterschool athletics.
Noteworthy events
2002: South Windsor high School was the state's first municipal facility to be powered and heated by a fuel cell, made possible by a funding program through the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund. The PureCell 200 kW fuel cell was manufactured and installed by South Windsor-based UTC Power, a division of United Technologies Corporation.[2]
Spring 2004: Students Mark Schneider and Jeffrey Schneider won the Siemens Westinghouse Competition with their research project, “Simulation of the West Nile Virus using STELLA 7.02.” The competition features a $100,000 top prize, and the brothers were interviewed by several media outlets, including CNN's Paula Zahn.
March 2005: William Haun, a South Windsor High School senior, represented Connecticut as a recipient of the 2005 William Randolph Hearst Foundation United States Senate Youth Scholarship. The foundation awards a $5,000 scholarship to two recipients from all fifty states and U.S. territories, in addition to a week in Washington, D.C. where winners meet U.S. Senators, cabinet officials, a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and the President of the United States. Mr. Haun received a proclamation from the town of South Windsor honoring the achievement.
April 2005: Four students at South Windsor High School wore T-shirts bearing anti-gay marriage slogans. At the time, the Connecticut General Assembly voted to legalize civil unions in the state. School administrators asked the students to remove the shirts, but they refused and were asked to leave school grounds. The content of the shirts and the actions of school administrators raised issues of free speech within a school environment. The ACLU, among other groups, criticized the school's actions.
October 2006: Three members of the South Windsor High School football team were suspended from the team for posting a derogatory video on Myspace. The video emphasized the use of explicit language and violence against opposing teams and players. This event brought into scope the continuing trend of socially unacceptable material posted on Myspace and Facebook. Many students and family members appealed for the football players but the school vowed to keep strict expectations on student athletes.
December 2006: The ACLU threatened legal action against South Windsor Public Schools since the graduation ceremony is held at a church in Bloomfield. The organization contends that this is a violation of separation of church and state.
April 2007: Bobcat Robotics, the South Windsor High School FIRST Robotics team won the international championship event in Atlanta, partnered with teams from Worcester, Massachusetts and Las Vegas, Nevada.[3]
April 2010: Bobcat Robotics, the South Windsor High School FIRST Robotics team won the FIRST National competition for a second time, partnered with teams from Milford, Michigan and Redondo Beach, California.
November 2011: South Windsor High School served as a community shelter for nine consecutive days and nights in the aftermath of Winter Storm Alfred. When grid power failed, emergency response mechanisms kicked in, with fuel cell systems supplying critical electrical power, as well as heat and hot water.[4] Town Manager Matt Galligan said 200 people from South Windsor and neighboring towns were sleeping in the high school each night. Fuel cell power helped more than 600 people eat three hot meals a day prepared by kitchen staff. The nurses' station was operational; there were hot showers and charging stations for electronics. [5]
May 2015: South Windsor High School suspends and eventually compels the resignation of a tenured and decorated teacher for involvement in a reading of Allen Ginsberg's poem "Please Master" during an Advanced Placement English Class.[6][7]
August 2015: Business education teacher Ellen Festi was named the South Windsor teacher of the year.
August 2016: Newsweek[8] ranked South Windsor High School as 348/500 on their list of the top 500 high schools in the United States in the year 2016.
March 2018: The South Windsor High School Show Choir “Choral Spectrum” was awarded Best In Show and Grand Champion at the Nutmeg Show Choir Festival at Windsor Locks High School in Windsor Locks, CT. Additionally, the show choir received a best band award, a best choral sound award, a best female soloist award, and a best male soloist award.
Notable alumni
Romil Hemnani (member of the musical group Brockhampton)
External links
References
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-24. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
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at position 3 (help) - ^ "Fuel Cell System Saves the Day in Connecticut in Wake of Winter Storm Alfred - CleanTechnica". cleantechnica.com. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^ "Fuel cells have arrived: Fuel cells have arrived". Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^ Freedlander, David (28 May 2015). "Award-Winning Teacher Fired for Reading an Allen Ginsberg Poem". Retrieved 27 August 2018 – via www.thedailybeast.com.
- ^ RONDINONE, NICHOLAS. "South Windsor Teacher Faces Termination After Sharing 'Wholly Inappropriate' Poem". Retrieved 27 August 2018.
- ^ "America's Top High Schools 2016". 11 August 2016. Retrieved 27 August 2018.