- Benson Polytechnic High School
Infobox School
name = Benson Polytechnic High School
imagesize = 150px
motto = United by Spirit, Bonded by Name.
established = 1919
type = Technical
head of school = Steve Olczak
location = 546 NE 12th Ave Portland Oregon
coordinates = coord|45.52726|-122.65301|display=inline,title
country = USA
district = Portland Public School District
enrollment = 1508
grades = 9 to 12
free_label = Publication
free_text =Tech Pep
mascot = Techman
website = http://www.bensonhs.pps.k12.or.usBenson Polytechnic High School is a
coeducation al, publictechnical school in the Portland Public Schools District. Its nine-acre campus is located in the center of Portland's Eastside commercial area. Matriculants are given a normal high school education with special emphasis in a technical area.Benson is accredited by the
Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges . It is a member ofSkillsUSA (formerly Vica) andHealth Occupations Students of America (HOSA).History of Benson
Benson's predecessor
Benson Polytechnic High School began in 1908 as the Portland School of Trades in the Atkinson Building at 11th and Davis in Northwest Portland. It was established to give "boys who wished to enter a trade a better opportunity than do shops and factories of the present time." Any boy from Portland who was at least fourteen years old, or who was a grammar school graduate, could attend. The course of study was three years. Students could also attend night school and/or summer sessions at the trade school.
In 1909, a course of study for girls was added. The Portland School of Trades was coeducational until 1913 when the girls' departments were moved to the Lownsdale School (which later became Lincoln High School).
Beginnings and the First World War
The Portland School Board voted to change the school's name to Benson Polytechnic High School after civic leader and philanthropist
Simon Benson gave $100,000 in 1917 to the Portland School District for the construction of a building to house a technical school. The School Board appropriated an equal amount of money. Six blocks of land at Northeast 12th and Hoyt were purchased and a building was built, and the new Benson Polytechnic School opened its doors in September 1918 to 46 boys.Benson Polytechnic School served not only the educational needs of the city's youth, but also the defense needs of a nation at war. During
World War I the federal government took control of the school. Twenty-four hours a day, recruits were stationed and trained on the campus. North and south wings were added to the back of the school building to serve as a barracks for the troops.Expansion and the Second World War
After
World War I , the barracks became shop classrooms, and surplus government property was purchased and used as shop equipment. Mr. Benson gave the student body $10,000, and the first Tech Show was presented to the Portland community. Benson Polytechnic School grew rapidly in course offerings and in student population. In 1920, the printing department was set up and the school paper, the Tech Pep. was published. In May 1921 the Benson Tech Radio Club received a government license to operatetelegraph station 7YK, later changing thecall sign to 7XAD in October 1923. This would lead to Benson's first broadcasting station onMay 4 ,1923 at 6:00 PM when station KFIF signed on the air. KFIF would become KBPS onMarch 17 ,1930 when KFIF became too expensive for the student body to operate, the District accepted ownership of the station. The station was renamed KBPS (for Benson Polytechnic School) and has continued to this day to operate on the Benson campus and to be staffed by Benson students. In 1926, an aviation department was added to the school. By 1940, Benson had 2,800 students and was the largest school in Portland.During World War II, the federal government once again utilized Benson Polytechnic School. Training men during swing and graveyard shifts, the War Production Board kept the Benson building in use twenty-four hours a day for every day of the war. The building was a high school for Portland's young men from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and a training facility for federal industry from 2:30 p.m. until 8 a.m.
Deterioration of both the facility and the student body was a concern following World War II. Because the building had been in continuous use during the war, it was left in extremely poor condition. Benson became a "dumping ground" for troubled students from 1945 to 1952.
Modern times
In 1953, the Portland School Board launched a five-year building program to upgrade Benson. A library and automotive wing were completed in 1954. The north shop wing was remodeled in 1955 and the south shop wing in 1960. Benson became
co-educational once again in September 1973. Six females attended that year. When the health occupations program was moved from Washington High School to Benson in 1980, Benson's female population grew substantially.An arsonist's fire damaged offices and classrooms in the main section of Benson on January 3, 1991. Coincidentally, the School Board had already scheduled the Benson facility for major improvements. In 1991, a new health occupation wing, a new library, a new student services center, and a new band room were added; and halls and offices were modernized.
tudent profile
As a
magnet school , Benson is highly selective among the Portland area. Until recently, students were required to complete an application for admissions. This, however, is no longer the case due to the requirements of theNo Child Left Behind Act ; instead a lottery is used to determine which students are admitted. As of Fall 2003, there were 1508 students enrolled in Benson. 84% are seeking a higher degree after graduation.
*By grade: 486 freshmen, 420 sophomores, 314 juniors, 288 seniors
*By gender: 44% female, 56% male
*By ethnicity: 28.7% Caucasian, 25.4% African Americans, 27.3% Asian Americans, 14.5% Hispanic, and 2.0% Native American.Curriculum
In addition to a standard high school curriculum, students specialize in a self-selected major during the final two years of enrollment. Students may specialize in the following areas, provided by a partnership with
SkillsUSA andHealth Occupations Students of America (HOSA):*Communications Technology
*Construction Technology
*Computer Hardwarer Technology
*Computer Software Technology
*Drafting Technology
*Engineering Technology
*Electric Technology (House Wiring)
*Electrical Engineering Technology
*Health Occupations
*KBPS Radio Technology
*Manufacturing Engineering Technology
*Transportation TechnologyAthletics and extracurricular programs
Benson is a member of the
Oregon School Activities Association (OSAA). It offers a number of interscholastic varsity sports, such as baseball, softball, basketball, wrestling, track and field, swimming, tennis, golf, cross country, soccer, football, volleyball, rally, and dance. It also has various intramural sports.Notable Athletic Graduates:
A.C. Green (1981),Mfon Udoka [PlayerTarbes Gespe Bigorre , 2004 Nigerian Olympic Team] (1994),Tom Dodd (1976).In addition, Benson offers a number of extracurricular pursuits, such as interschool, local, state, and national mathematics competitions through the math school,
Math Engineering Science Achievement (MESA) club,Boy Scouts of America Explorer Program,Junior Achievement , a chess club, National Science Bowl club, National Oceonagraphic and Atmospheric Bowl (Salmon Bowl) club, National Brain Bowl club, andstudent government . It also has aNational Honor Society chapter.References
External links
* [http://www.bensonhs.pps.k12.or.us/ Benson Polytechnic High School]
* [http://www.bensontechalumni.org/ Benson Polytechnic High School Alumni Association]
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