Hanover High School (New Hampshire)
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Hanover High School | |
Location | |
---|---|
Hanover, NH, USA | |
Information | |
Religion | None |
Principal | Deborah Gillespie |
Enrollment |
~780 |
Faculty | 59 |
Average class size | --- |
Student:teacher ratio | 14:1 |
Average SAT scores (2005) | --- |
Type | Public |
Campus | 2 Buildings |
Athletics | --- |
Mascot | Marauder |
Color(s) | Maroon/White |
Established | 1888 |
Homepage | Hanover High School |
Coordinates: Hanover High School is the only public high school in the Dresden School District, in Hanover, New Hampshire, USA. In 1963 it became the first interstate high school in the country as part of a bill that was the last ever signed into action by John F. Kennedy. Today it accepts students from several communities in New Hampshire and Vermont. Enrollment is approximately 786 students, the majority of whom come from the towns of Hanover, NH and Norwich, VT. The school also serves the town of Lyme, NH, which has no high school of its own. 11% of the student body attends on a tuition basis from towns such as Cornish, NH, Strafford, VT, Hartland, VT, and Piermont, NH. The school employs 59 full-time faculty members.
Contents |
[edit] Academics
Hanover High School was ranked "silver" by the U.S. News & World Report "Best High Schools" survey, indicating a high degree of college readiness in its graduates.[1]
It is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges, and over 94% of students are accepted to or are planning to attend college shortly after graduating[citation needed].
The academic program is divided into the traditional five departments: English, Math, Science, Foreign Language, and Social Studies. Each department offers a selection of courses; however, all freshmen must take a standard set of courses. As students advance, additional opportunities become available. The school's curriculum and policies emphasize individual student freedoms. For example, seniors often elect to design and complete an independent study project that academically explores a personal interest. With Dartmouth College a short walk from the school, some students attend courses at the college when they have exhausted the high school's offerings.
The academic atmosphere is generally student-centric, with off-campus privileges widely available and with a council of students, faculty, and community members (founded in 1974) whose governing power extends in many areas beyond that of even the school principal.
[edit] Extracurricular and elective activities
Hanover has a very comprehensive athletics program, with players competing at both the varsity and junior varsity levels. Sports offered include baseball, basketball, crew, field hockey, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis, track, volleyball, cross country running, cross-country skiing, ski jumping and as of 2006, swimming. The physical education program also has an extensive ropes course, which is one of the largest in New England[citation needed], and a climbing wall. Athletics are a major component of the student culture. The girl's cross country team was 4th in the nation during the 2007 season.
Furthermore, the school boasts a large number of music ensembles (both official and student-run), publications, community service organizations, official and student-organized drama groups, a debate team, and a quiz bowl team that has in recent years won both New Hampshire and Vermont state championships.
[edit] Renovation
In May 2003 the towns of Hanover and Norwich voted to fund an expansive renovation to the school. Banwell Architects designed the new facilities, and Eckman Construction was hired to oversee construction. Nearly all of the construction was complete before the 2007-2008 school year. Another year of negligible work is expected for "things that got missed or got built and weren't quite right and need to be fixed." [2]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Alumni groups pages