Bluffton High School (South Carolina)

Bluffton High School
Location
12 H.E. McCracken Cir
Bluffton, South Carolina 29910

United States
Coordinates 32°15′06″N 80°53′56″W / 32.25167°N 80.89889°W / 32.25167; -80.89889Coordinates: 32°15′06″N 80°53′56″W / 32.25167°N 80.89889°W / 32.25167; -80.89889
Information
Type Public high school
School district Beaufort County
Superintendent Jeffery Moss
Principal Denise Garison
Grades 09-12
Enrollment 1,092 (as of 2010-11)
Campus size 60 acres (24 ha)
Campus type Suburban
Color(s)          Green and black
Mascot Bobcat
Feeder schools Bluffton Middle
H.E. McCracken Middle
Bluffton Elementary
M.C. Riley Elementary
Pritchardville Elementary
Red Cedar Elementary
Website blhs.beaufortschools.net

Bluffton High School is a public high school within the Beaufort County School District, located in Bluffton, South Carolina, United States. Opened in 2004 as a result of new growth and development, the high school serves students in the mainland areas of southern Beaufort County, including Bluffton, Pritchardville, and Okatie. It shares a larger K-12 campus with H.E. McCracken Middle School and Bluffton Elementary School. The school was honored in 2012 and 2013 by the Washington Post High School Challenge Index as one of "America's Best High Schools".[1]

Academics

According to data released by the South Carolina Department of Education, Bluffton High School earned a "C" letter grade for the 2012-2013 school year, meeting academic expectations put forth by the state in standardized testing and graduation accomplishment.[2] The school previously earned a "B" for the 2011-2012 school year.

Bluffton High School received "excellent" scores on the Absolute Rating and Growth Rating metrics on its 2012 state report card. In 2012, 91.7% of students passed the state-mandated High School Assessment Program (HSAP). The four-year graduation rate was 70.1% in 2012, a marginal decrease from 70.4% in 2011. The teacher retention rate was 79.2%. Based on 2011 financial data, the amount spent per student was $8,255.

In 2012, the average student-teacher ratio in core subjects was 29.3 students for every 1 teacher. In total, 28.5% of students were enrolled in Advanced Placement courses and 56.2% of students were enrolled in career/technology courses. Bluffton High School is accredited with the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.[3]

Student take eight classes a year on an A/B block schedule. Four classes a day are taken, and alternate between schedules. The school uses the State of South Carolina's uniform grading scale where an A is 100–93, a B is 92–85, a C is 84–77, a D is 76–70, and a F is 69–0.[4] Bluffton High School educational resources include APEX, Rosetta Stone, Compass Learning, EDM online, Rubicon Atlas, Promethian Planet, SAT prep, Sharepoint, School Fusion, and USA Test Prep.[5]

According to the school's School Improvement Council, 83% of seniors earned a National Career Readiness Certificate as a result of passing their ACT WorkKeys Assessment.

Athletics

Bluffton High School competes at the Class AAA level in the South Carolina High School League. The school fields teams for boys in football, wrestling, basketball, swimming, cross country, track & field, tennis, golf, soccer, and lacrosse; and for girls in cheerleading, volleyball, basketball, swimming, cross country, soccer, track & field, tennis, lacrosse, and golf.

Bluffton's historic rival is Hilton Head Island High School. When elevated to Class AAAA in 2012, nearby Beaufort High School became a major rival of the school.

Although Bluffton is a relatively new school, it has achieved tremendous success in its athletics programs. In 2009 and 2011, the girls' golf team won a state title,[6] and regional championships were won in softball, boys' swimming, volleyball, wrestling, and boys' soccer. In 2011, the football team made it to the AAA state final, losing to traditional powerhouse South Pointe High School.

In 2017, the Boys Soccer team reached the AAA state final in historic season thanks to coach Joshua Fox, unfortunately losing to Berea High School in a close match that ended 3-2 in overtime.

Clubs and Extracurriculars

Bluffton High School offers a wide range of clubs including Youth in Government, National Honor Society, Z-Club, Model UN, DECA, Robotics Club, Young Republican & Young Democrat Club, Drama Club, Thespian Society, FCA, National Art Honor Society, Academic World Quest, Teens for Healthy Youth, Student Council, Science Olympiad, and Bobcat Readers.

Youth In Government

One of the largest clubs at BLHS, the Youth in Government Program or YIG is a model Legislative and court conference run through the YMCA. This club not only teaches students about government but also puts the students real-world political situations. At the yearly held conference in Columbia, SC's capital officers are elected to the Positions of Youth Governor, Lt. Governor, Speaker of the House, Attorney General, Secretary of State, Comptroller General, and Superintendent of Education. In 2016, for the first time in the conference's 30 year history two officers were elected from the Low Country and again in 2017 4 officers were elected from the Low Country. Bluffton High holds the three highest offices at the conference and is the seat of the 31st Youth Governor.

2018

Governor Maile S. Paulmeier

Lt. Governor John J. Acker IV

Attorney General Caleb B. Weis

2017

Speaker of the House Maile S. Paulmeier

Comptroller General William E. Schmidt

References

  1. https://apps.washingtonpost.com/local/highschoolchallenge/schools/2013/list/south-schools/
  2. http://www.islandpacket.com/2013/08/01/2607508/beaufort-county-students-continue.html
  3. http://ed.sc.gov/data/report-cards/2012/district.cfm?ID=0701
  4. "Bluffton High School Assessment". Assessment. Bluffton High School. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  5. "Bluffton High School". Main page. Bluffton High School. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  6. "Bluffton HIgh School Accolades". Accolades. Bluffton High School. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.