Albany High School (California)

Albany High School
Address
603 Key Route Blvd.
Albany, California 94706
United States
Coordinates 37°53′45″N 122°17′33″W / 37.895890°N 122.292421°W / 37.895890; -122.292421Coordinates: 37°53′45″N 122°17′33″W / 37.895890°N 122.292421°W / 37.895890; -122.292421
Information
Type Public high school
School district Albany Unified School District
Principal Alexa Ritchie
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 1,195 (2014-15)[1]
Campus Semi-urban
Color(s) Red and white[2]
Mascot Cougar
Newspaper The Cougar
Website Albany High School Official Website

Albany High School (AHS) is a comprehensive public high school located in Albany, California. The school educates approximately 1,300 students from grades 9 through 12.

Achievements

In 2001, Albany was accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges for the maximum term of six years. Albany High School was #756 nationally ranked in 2016, and #119 among California high schools.[3]

The school is known for its athletic, science, math, and music programs.

Music programs

The music program at the school serves approximately 250 students and supports choral, orchestral, concert band, and jazz programs. Craig Bryant is the Director of Instrumental Music, a position he has held since the fall of 2007. Students participate in the Jazz School Studio bands, the Oakland, Berkeley and San Francisco Youth Orchestras, and the CMEA and CBDA All-State Bands, as well as with other area honor groups.

The instrumental music program is made up of two concert bands, two jazz bands, and a string orchestra. There are approximately 140 students involved in the program, with about half the jazz students also participating in one of the concert bands. Each group at the school meets three times per week to rehearse (for 50 minutes on Mondays, and 90 on Tuesdays/Thursdays or Wednesdays/Fridays).

The ensembles at AHS perform four main concerts a year in addition to participating in festivals and recording competitions. The groups have garnered positive attention through performances at Yoshi's Oakland, Ashkenaz, the Freight and Salvage, and other Bay Area venues.

The Albany High School Jazz Band has received top ratings and awards at the Folsom, Reno, and Santa Cruz Jazz Festivals. The 2010 group performed as a featured ensemble at the 2010 California Music Education Association State Conference in Sacramento. The band was also selected as a finalist for the 2010 Next Generation Festival, presented by the Monterey Jazz Festival, and the 2010 Essentially Ellington festival, presented by Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York, New York.

STEM programs

Albany High School has many competing STEM teams, most notably Science Bowl, National Ocean Science Bowl, and Science Olympiad.

Since it was founded at Albany Middle School (Division B) in 2013, Albany's Science Olympiad has qualified for state 3 times. In 2017, the Albany High School Science Olympiad (Division C) team won first place in the Bay Area Regional Science Olympiad, beating all other schools in the BARSO region, and placing 5th overall at State. [4]

The Science Bowl team won the 1993 Department of Energy National Science Bowl competition.[5] Through the 1990s and 2000s, the team was a consistent top finisher at the national level. Albany High won its 2008 Science Bowl regional competition, defeating academic rival Mission San Jose High School. Traditionally, both schools went to different regional competitions, but in 2008, due to a desire to participate in both the Otter Bowl and Science Bowl, whose regionals coincided, Albany was forced to attend MSJ's regional competition for Science Bowl. In 2009, their NOSB team did not fare as well. However, they fared much better in the National Science Bowl, placing fifth nationwide. In 1993, they won the nationwide Science Bowl competition in Washington D.C.

In 2012, the school National Ocean Sciences Bowl team went to Baltimore for Nationals, where they took seventh place. In 2013, the National Ocean Sciences Bowl team went to Milwaukee for Nationals and took fifth place. In 2016, the National Ocean Sciences Bowl team, after winning regionals at Stanford University, traveled to North Carolina, where it won first place in the 2016 Department of Commerce National Ocean Sciences Bowl competition, earning an all-expenses paid trip to Monaco.[6] In 2018, Albany won the regional NOSB competition, hosted at CSU Monterey Bay, and placed fourth overall in the national finals in Colorado later that year.

Athletics

Athletic teams

Athletic teams of Albany High School belong to the Tri Counties Athletic League (TCAL) in the North Coast Section (NCS) of the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), which manages all high school sports teams in California.[7] Fall sports include football, girls' and boys' cross country, girls' volleyball, girls' golf, and girls' tennis. Sports offered during the winter are girls' and boys' soccer, girls' and boys' basketball, and girls' and boys' wrestling. Sports teams offered during the spring include softball, baseball, girls' and boys' track and field, girls' and boys' swimming, boys' golf, and boys' tennis.[7]

Athletic achievements

Albany High's soccer team was successful in 2010, with the varsity boys' and girls' teams going undefeated in the winter season of 2010. The girls' volleyball team went to the Northern California State Championships in 2011, but lost. In February 2014, the girls' wrestling team took first place at the CIF State tournament.[8]

Campus history

Albany High School's new building

In 1997, Albany High School’s main building and gymnasium, both completed in 1934, were deemed to be seismically unsound. They were demolished, and construction began on a new campus. During the four years of construction, between 1997 and 2001, classes were held in portable trailers. The new school building and gymnasium opened in 2001.

During the 2004-2005 school year, several security cameras were installed in the building to prevent vandalism.

In 2004, the school suffered overcrowding due to an overly large freshman class. The large influx of students was caused in part by an Albany Unified School District policy, which allowed students from other cities such as El Cerrito and Richmond to enter Albany schools.

The school mascot is the cougar and the school colors are red and white.

The current principal as of the 2017-2018 school year is Alexa Ritchie, who was formerly the principal of Marin Elementary School in the same school district.[9]

Academic competitions

Albany participates in many local competitions, including NAQT, NOSB's Otter Bowl (which they won in 2006 and took fourth in nationwide), and the National Science Bowl, in which they also took fourth place nationwide.

The school hosts a well-established Model United Nations program. In the 2010-2011 academic year, Albany became home to a forensic (Speech and Debate) team. The Albany High Speech and Debate team[10] is a member of the Golden Gate Speech Association and the National Forensic League. Both programs are established in club format; while other local schools have classes dedicated solely to Model UN and debate, Albany runs both programs as student clubs.

Instagram postings controversy

On May 1, 2017, four Albany High students filed suit against the school arguing that they had been punished unfairly for their involvement with racist harassment on Instagram. An attempt at restorative justice was made, as the school administration made the decision to hire SEEDS, a restorative justice training program, to try to resolve the conflict. The students and their lawyers claimed that the school had violated their First Amendment rights by punishing them for actions that took place outside of school grounds and outside of school hours.[11] Complaints by the four students also include complaints about an incident in which the students were refused police protection by Jeff Anderson as a growing body of students grew outside of the office where they were meeting. As the four students attempted to leave through their peers, two of the students were struck in the head by an enraged demonstrator, while others hid in a locked vehicle for safety, prompting complaints that the school mishandled the situation and allowed an unruly assembly to take place. [12] Many teachers did not take attendance or mark students as absent for attending the unsanctioned assembly. In the interim between the original incident and the lawsuit, principal Jeff Anderson was reassigned within the district, and former principal Ron Rosenbaum took over as interim principal for the remainder of the school year.[13]

On May 26, Judge James Donato granted an order to halt the expulsion hearing for plaintiff Kevin Chen, which was scheduled for June 1 of that year.[14] The ruling stated, "The Court is also advised that Chen is a rising senior about to start the college admissions process, and being wrongly expelled would likely cause irreparable harm to his admission prospects." [15]

Block schedule

Albany High changed from a 7-period per day schedule to a block schedule during the 2005–2006 school year. Instead of having seven 57-minute periods per day, the new block schedule consists of two blocks, A and B. Block A, on Tuesday and Thursday, has 94-minute periods for periods 1, 3, 5***, and 7. Block B, on Wednesday and Friday, has 94-minute periods for periods 2, 4, and 6 with an added 40-minute Advisory period between 2nd and 4th period. On Monday, all classes last for 51 minutes. The first class always begins at 8:10 am, except on finals week.[16]

Neighborhoods zoned to Albany

The entire city of Albany is zoned to this school.[17] The University Village development, a student housing complex of the University of California Berkeley which houses families, is assigned to this school.[18]

Extracurricular activities

  • AHS varsity softball
  • AHS newspaper - The Cougar[19]
  • AHS baseball
  • AHS volleyball
  • AHS video production website
  • AHS Model United Nations Club
  • AHS Science Olympiad
  • AHS National Science Bowl
  • AHS National Ocean Science Bowl
  • AHS Speech and Debate Club

Notable graduates

See also

References

  1. "Albany High". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved December 18, 2017.
  2. http://www.albany.k12.ca.us/ahs/ [down]
  3. https://www.usnews.com/education/best-high-schools/california/rankings
  4. "Northern California Science Olympiad Results". NorCal Science Olympiad. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  5. "NSB: 1st Place Teams and Prizes". Archived from the original on 2008-01-16. Retrieved 2008-01-23.
  6. "National Ocean Science Bowl". National Ocean Science Bowl.
  7. 1 2 "ATHLETICS MAIN PAGE - Albany High School". ahs.ausdk12.org. Retrieved 2015-09-26.
  8. "California Interscholastic Federation" (PDF). www.cifstate.org. Retrieved 2015-09-26.
  9. "Post by @albanyhighca on Instagram". Instagram. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  10. http://albany.patch.com/announcements/ahs-debate-team-puts-up-a-good-fight
  11. Renda, Matthew (2 May 2017). "Students Punished Over Racist Posts File Free-Speech Suit". Courthouse News Service. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  12. Renda, Mathew (3 May 2017). "Students Punished Over Racist Posts File Free-Speech Suit". Courthouse News Service. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  13. Karnes, Bea. "Albany High School Principal Reassigned". Albany Patch. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  14. Renda, Matthew (27 May 2017). "Judge Steps in for Student Accused of Racism". Courthouse News Service. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  15. (PDF) http://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Albany.pdf. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. "Bell Schedules". Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  17. "INITIAL STUDY ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL COUGAR FIELD IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT." Albany Unified School District. April 2006. 2. Retrieved on October 2, 2011. "The high school campus, with an enrollment of approximately 1,200 pupils in grades 9-12, and the middle school, with about 900, serve students in the entire District attendance area which coincides with the boundaries of the City of Albany"
  18. "Local Schools." University Village. Retrieved on October 2, 2011.
  19. AHS newspaper - The Cougar
  20. 1 2 Garofoli, Joe (1995-12-13). "Rancid Proves It's Punk Enough In A Blazing Show". Contra Costa Times. p. F01.
  21. Heater, Jay (2006-06-09). "Getting kick out of mixed martial arts: Griffin, a former Times' top 100 athlete from Albany High School, carries a 6-0 record into tonight's lightweight fight". Contra Costa Times. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  22. Viard, Alex (2007-10-30). "The Pack Interview". Drop Magazine. Archived from the original on 2008-02-12. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
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