Auburn High School (Rockford, Illinois)
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Auburn High School | |
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Address | |
5110 Auburn Street Rockford, Illinois 61101 USA |
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Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Information | |
School type | Public Secondary |
Opened | 1960 |
School district | Rockford Public School District 205 |
Superintendent | Dr. Ehren Robert Jarrett[1] |
CEEB Code | 143693 |
Principal | Devon LaRosa[2] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Gender | Coed |
Enrollment | 1976[3] |
Average class size | 23.0[3] |
Campus type | Mid-size City[4] |
Color(s) | Red Black[5] |
Fight song | Mighty Auburn |
Athletics conference | Northern Illinois Conference (NIC-10)[6] |
Mascot | Knight |
Team name | (Lady) Knights[7] |
Average ACT scores | 19.9[3] |
Yearbook | Excalibur |
Website | Official School Website |
Auburn High School is a public high school located in Rockford, Illinois, USA, currently housing close to 2,000 ninth- through twelfth-grade students living in the Rockford school district.
In addition to serving students living on the west side of Rockford, Auburn houses the high school portions of the Renaissance Academy(formerly known as the Gifted Program), the Creative and Performing Arts Program (CAPA), and the only Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program remaining in Rockford.
Academics
Auburn maintains a standard offering of typical academic core, foreign language, and basic career preparation courses, along with honors offerings for a small number of widely taken subjects. Most students who desire to take advanced or specialized classes feed in to Auburn's specialized programs described below:
The Renaissance Academy program is the high school component of the Rockford Public Schools' Gifted Program for high-achieving students. The Renaissance Academy program is selective, with admittance based on annual testing, and along with Marshall School and Washington School, which serves grades 1 through 5 and 6 through 8 respectively, forms the Gifted Program in Rockford. This program continually ranks high in the state with respect to test scores. [8] With Academy and non-Academy test scores separated, the Academy frequently ranks among the top student bodies in the nation in both middle school standardized tests and high school ACT scores. [9]
The Academy program currently offers AP courses in English Literature and Composition, English Language and Composition, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Statistics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics B, Physics C, World History, European History, United States History, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, United States Government and Politics, Comparative Politics, and Psychology, as well as Music Theory and Art History through independent study. The remaining non-AP core academic requirements for graduation are supplemented with Renaissance Academy-level core classes, and an Academy Seal of distinction is offered to students who successfully complete four years of Academy and AP courses in each of four core academic categories while maintaining good academic standing.
The Auburn School for the Creative and Performing Arts (CAPA) is the 9th-12th grade portion of the district's K-12 CAPA specialized arts program. Auburn CAPA students can take academic coursework via regular, honors, or Academy courses while continuing training in visual arts, music, dance, and theatre through coursework and involvement in arts festivals, recitals, and a five-production theatre season.[10]
The only Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps remaining in the Rockford Public Schools is housed at Auburn. [11] Many of the top students in the program are a part of the Rifle Team (which is among the top teams in the state), the Drill Team (which has placed at Purdue University in the past few years), the Color Guard, the Sabre Guard, and the Drum and Bugle Corps.[citation needed]
Facilities
Auburn's school complex is located across Pierpont Avenue from McIntosh Elementary School and between School and Auburn Streets. A 2007 school board decision combined the Auburn High School and Wilson Middle School campuses into the "Auburn Main Campus" (housing sophomores through seniors at the traditional Auburn High School building adjacent to Auburn Street) and the "Auburn Freshman Campus" (housing approximately 600 freshmen in the former Wilson Middle School building). This student arrangement was in place for the 2007-08 through 2010-11 school years; however, beginning with the 2011-12 school year, freshmen are now housed with the rest of the student body at the traditional Auburn High School building due to school board decisions to consolidate Rockford middle school facilities. Cottonwood Airport is located across the street to the North of Auburn High School, and has a north-south grass strip aligned approximately with the current football field.
The gymnasium is named for notable former coach Dolph Stanley. For 10 seasons, Stanley coached the Knights to four regional and three sectional titles, advancing to the state quarterfinals in 1963.[12] Though his teams did not make the finals of the IHSA tournament, Stanley's Auburn teams achieved a combined record of 176 wins and 78 losses. In the fall of 201 a new fieldhouse opened on the Auburn campus for their athletics teams which will include but not limited to 4 indoor basketball courts, 200M indoor track, updated weight room and other modern features. The Fieldhouse hosted its first high school events on January 31, 2015 for the NIC-10 Conference wrestling meet and February 7, 2015 the First Annual Auburn Boys Track & Field Invite.
In the fall of 1969 a football stadium was built & opened next to Auburn High School. Originally, and for many years, the stadium was called "Westburn Stadium", and was used by both Auburn and the now-defunct West High School (1940-1989) that originally had no stadium on their campus. Currently, Auburn shares the stadium (now named for their first principal, John W. Wyeth Stadium) with Jefferson High School, as Jefferson also has no home stadium on its campus. The football field is surrounded by a relatively new track. Field Turf was added to the stadium in the summer of 2012 along with RPS205's other facility, Swanson Stadium located at Guilford High School. Prior to the 1969-70 school year Auburn High school played their "home" football games and track & field meets at Charles Beyer Stadium located at 15th Avenue & Seminary Street from 1960 to 1968 and two games in the fall of 1969 before moving to their current facility during the fall of 1969. (Beyer Stadium was also the home of the Rockford Peaches of the AAGBL from 1943 to 1954.)
Notable activities
The Scholastic Bowl teams under Coach Linda Greene has placed in the Final Four in the Illinois High School Association Scholastic Bowl state finals each of the past fourteen years, including a 3rd place finish in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2012, a 2nd place finish in 2003, 2009, 2010, and 2011, and 1st place finishes in 2008 and 2015. Based on high-level quiz bowl tournament statistics, the Auburn Quiz Bowl A team is currently ranked 16th[13] in the nation as of June 2014.
The Auburn Chess team has also placed well in the Illinois High School Association Chess state finals in the past, achieving a 4th place finish in 1996, a 2nd place finish in 1989, 1991, and 1994, and a 1st place finish in 1992 and 1993.
The Auburn basketball team finally made their first IHSA final 4 appearance in 2012, under their 6th Head Coach Bryan Ott, bringing home a 3rd place trophy. Auburn was the last Rockford Public school basketball team to bring home at least a 4th place trophy from the state tournament (Rockford HS 3-1st place finishes the last being in 1939, West HS 2-1st place finishes in 1955 & 56, East HS 2nd place in 1948, Guilford HS 2nd place in 1993, Jefferson HS 4th place in 2005.)
Auburn football has made it to the IHSA playoffs four times since the playoffs were established in 1974. Their first appearance was in 1990 winning two games before being eliminated in the third round (quarter finals) and then in 2012 and 2014 being eliminated in the first round both years. They clinched their fourth playoff berth in 2015 along with a share of the NIC-10 conference championship. This is the first conference championship for Auburn since a 3-way tie in 1962 with Elgin H.S. and Aurora East H.S. in the NIC-10's predecessor, the Big 8 Conference.
The Lady Knights basketball team won back to back IHSA Class AA Regional Championships in 1986 & 1987, advancing to the Sectional Finals in 1986 before being eliminated in the state tournament.
Madasyn Pettersen (Sophomore) representing Auburn on the RPS205 Co-op girls golf team won the IHSA Class AA individual state championship in October 2015. The previous year as a Freshmen she placed 3rd in the state. This is Auburn's first individual state champion.
Notable alumni
- Adam Arling is a guitarist for the band The Last Vegas.[14][15]
- Charles Box is a former mayor of Rockford; the first African American to hold that office.[16]
- Andre “Rosey” Brown (1956-2005) was a character actor and police officer on forces in Billings, MT, Seattle, WA, and Inglewood, CA. Brown's security detail for Pearl Bailey and her husband Louie Bellson led him to acting. Brown has appeared in films, television shows and ads, including a series of Pepsi commercials directed by Joe Pytka. [17]
- Michael Elston, Chief of Staff and Counselor, Office of the Deputy Attorney General, United States Department of Justice.[citation needed]
- Kenneth Gould was a boxer who won the welterweight bronze medal at the 1988 Summer Olympics. He won the world title at the 1986 World Amateur Boxing Championships in Reno, followed by a silver medal at the 1987 Pan American Games.
- Donald A. Manzullo (Class of 1962) is a U.S. Representative, representing Illinois' 16th congressional district.[18][19]
- Robert Nardelli is the former CEO of Chrysler and Home Depot.[20]
- Kimberla Lawson Roby is an author whose 16 novels have frequented numerous bestseller lists, including the New York Times.[21]
- Fred VanVleet (Class of 2012) is a guard for the Wichita State Shockers basketball team.
- Rick Venturi was head football coach for Northwestern University (1978–80) before briefly serving as head coach for the Indianapolis Colts (1991) and New Orleans Saints (1996). He has also been a defensive coordinator.[22]
- Shawn Wade is a former bass player for the band 12 Stones.[citation needed]
- Michelle Williams is a former member of the band Destiny's Child.[citation needed]
- Chuck Sweeney Senior Editor of the Rockford Register Star.
References
- ↑ [1]
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://www.greatschools.org/illinois/rockford/rockford-school-district-205/schools/?gradeLevels=h
- ↑ http://schools.chicagotribune.com/city/rockford#high-schools
- ↑ [2]
- ↑ http://www.tioh.hqda.pentagon.mil/Catalog/HeraldryMulti.aspx?CategoryId=5227&grp=8&menu=ROTC
- ↑ IHSA Record Book
- ↑ http://hsqbrank.com/2014/06/09/post-nationals-top-50-quiz-bowl-teams/
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
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- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0113012/
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