- Del City High School
-
Del City High School Location 1900 S Sunnylane Road
Del City, Oklahoma, 73115
United States of AmericaInformation Type Secondary school School district Mid-Del School District Principal Gina Hill[1] Vice Principals John Benardello, Philip Crawford, Leslie Berger[1] Grades 9-12[2] Enrollment 1250(as of 2010–11)[2] Campus type Suburban Song Alma Mater[3] Fight song Red and White Forever[3] Athletics Football, Basketball, Baseball, Softball,etc. Athletics conference Class 5A, Class 6A District 2(Football only) Mascot Eagles[2] Rival Midwest City High School Feeder schools Del Crest Middle School, Kerr Middle School. Del City High School is the only public high school located in Del City, Oklahoma and one of three high schools in the Mid-Del School District. The high school first opened in 1953.[4] According to GreatSchools.org, the high school rates above Midwest City High School and is rated below Carl Albert High School which are the other two high Schools in the district.[5] The school serves approximately 1,200 students.[6] About a third of graduating students attend a four-year college.[6]
Contents
History
Del City High School first opened in 1953, and graduated its first class soon after.[4]
Curriculum
Curriculum taught at Del City High is governed by state-mandated requirements for graduation. Subjects taught are physical education, Spanish, French, biology, chemistry, physics, business, general education, social studies, English, mathematics, career and technology, and the fine arts.
To graduate, students must take a total of 27 classes.[6] Students take four classes each of language arts, mathematics, and social studies.[6] They are required to take three science classes, two fine arts classes, two foreign language or computer technology classes and a physical education class.[6]
Sports
Del City High School students participate in baseball, cross country, softball, track, basketball, football, swimming, volleyball, golf, soccer, tennis, and wrestling.[7]
Basketball
In 2009, the girls' basketball team made their fourth appearance in the 6A State Tournament going on to win the 6A State Championship for their first ever State Championship.[8]
Football
The Del City Eagles have one championship which they won in 1976.[9] On September 4, 2009 Del City Eagles beat (their Sooner Road Rivals) The Midwest City Bombers for the first time since 2002 with a final score of 27-15.[10]
Extra-curricular activities
DECA
DCHS has a chapter of DECA, the high school marketing organization.[11]
Student Council
DC Student Council is responsible a number of activities with the school and community. DCHS StuCo is an active member of the OASC and NASC and attends the OASC State Convention and two District 9 Workshops yearly.[12]
National Honor Society
Established to recognize outstanding high school level students. More than just an honor roll, NHS serves to honor those students who have demonstrated excellence in the areas of Scholarship, Leadership, Service, and Character. DC NHS hosts Del City's WILD Week (Willing Individuals Leading with Determination).[13]
Band
The Del City High School Band program consists of the "Pride of Del City" marching band, concert band, two jazz bands, drumline, winterguard, and an athletic pep band. The band is active in the community and the state, doing over 50 performances throughout the school year. There are now two full jazz bands.
The purpose of NJROTC is to teach cadets basic military skills, military history, leadership skills/techniques, and discipline.[14]
Del City High School’s NJROTC unit, called Eagle Company, was created in the Fall of 1994.[14]
NJROTC is a multi-disciplinary curriculum encompassing leadership, citizenship, health, study skills, history, meteorology, astronomy, oceanography, navigation, current events, military drill, physical fitness and fun. In addition to the academics, students are given opportunities to assume various responsibilities within the unit as squad or platoon leaders. The unit hosts four drill teams, a Color (Honor) Guard, Marksmanship, Athletic and Academic teams. The academic teams have consistently been ranked in the top fifty of the nation, competing against over 3000 NJROTC teams world-wide. The Color Guards have appeared around the state at numerous civic and military functions.[14] The cadets perform at community service functions and fund raisers, and were awarded the Volunteer Organization of the Year award by the American Red Cross, the Distinguished Unit award, and Unit Achievement awards by the Navy. The cadets have raised thousands of dollars for the Special Olympics, provided holiday meals to the less fortunate, and provided monetary and physical assistance to disaster (tornado/flooding) victims throughout the years.[14]
Controversy
On November 15, 2010, The Advocate reported that a Del City High School student was kicked out of the school and barred from graduating after it was discovered that the young woman was a lesbian.[15] It was further by News 9 reported that McKenzie's girlfriend, Kelsey Hicks, 17, who had dropped out of Del City High School, was barred from returning to that school to graduate because of her sexual orientation.[16]
On November 19, 2010, a number of other students from the school contacted News 9 after the hundreds of threatening phone calls and e-mails the school district had received every day from gay rights supporters, Hannah Tatom, the Del City High School student body president says "It's a completely open place.[17] Everyone is themselves there, As a student body leader I see what goes on among students and interactions between the administration and students gay and straight." Tatom along with many others who have contacted News 9, say their school's administration doesn't discriminate against gay students. Tatom also says she believes this isn't about sexual orientation whatsoever, that its about bad behavior and Mid-Del District rules. The student who had been removed admitted that she and the others have been in trouble in the past, but that they're ready to go back and make things right.[17]
However the school district has said they will investigate any accusation made against employees and as a result of News 9's previous story, will be contacting the girls to thoroughly investigate their claims of discrimination. The school district says by law it can't comment on the allegations being made against them.[17]
Notable alumni
- Nick Blackburn, MLB player, a starting pitcher for the Minnesota Twins.[18]
- Clark Jolley (1988) Oklahoma State Senator.[19]
- Scott Inman (1997) Oklahoma House of Representatives, Leader designate of the minority party of the Oklahoma House of Representatives effective 2010.[20][21]
- Bob Kalsu (1963), All-American tackle at the University of Oklahoma, drafted by the Buffalo Bills; Robert Kalsu Stadium is named in his honor.[22]
- Josh Scobey (1997) NFL player, is currently playing for Las Vegas Locomotives football team.[23]
- John Smith (1983), college wrestler, 4-time World Champion, 2-time Olympic Games champion, is currently head wrestling coach at Oklahoma State University.[24]
External links
References
- ^ a b "Administration". Del City High School. http://sc.mid-del.net/education/components/sectionlist/default.php?sectiondetailid=30616&. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ a b c d "Profile". Del City High School. http://sc.mid-del.net/education/staff/staff.php?sectionid=3264&. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ a b "Fight Song and Alma Mater". http://164.58.184.7/education/staff/staff.php?sectionid=3259&. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
- ^ a b Del City High School Alumni Hall of Fame Inductees, DCHSAlumni.org (accessed May 18, 2009).
- ^ Del City High School, GreatSchools.org (accessed May 5, 2010)
- ^ a b c d e Del City School Profile (accessed May 10, 2010).
- ^ Eagle Sports. Retrieved on May 18, 2009.
- ^ Harper, Justin "Class 6A girls: Toni Young scores 14 as Del City beats Midwest City in final ", NewsOk, 2009-03-15. Retrieved on 2009-04-13.
- ^ http://www.ossaa.com/Sports/Football/HistoryofFootball.aspx
- ^ http://newsok.com/nick-warehime-a-wizard-for-del-city/article/3399408
- ^ "About Us". www.okdeca.org. http://www.okdeca.org/About_Us_FSIQ.html. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
- ^ "DISTRICT 9". www.oascok.org. http://www.oascok.org/districts/district9.html. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
- ^ "School Search". www.nhs.us. http://www.nhs.us/school-search/dsresult/t/state/ok?city=del+city&labelname=del+city+high+school. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
- ^ a b c d "FIND AN NJROTC UNIT". www.njrotc.navy.mi. https://www.njrotc.navy.mil/host_schools.asp#Oklahoma. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
- ^ "Lesbians Stopped From Graduating". November 15, 2010 (accessed November 15, 2010)
- ^ "Del City High Students Say Discrimination Keeping Them From Graduation". November 11, 2010 (accessed November 15, 2010)
- ^ a b c Surette, Rusty. "Del City High School Students Say School Doesn't Discriminate Against Gays". News 9. http://www.news9.com/Global/story.asp?S=13540782. Retrieved 7 January 2011.
- ^ "Nick Blackburn Profile". www.baseball-reference.com. http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/blackni01.shtml. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ jolley, clark. "Biography". clarkjolley.com. http://www.clarkjolley.com/?page_id=2. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
- ^ "Currently Elected Oklahoma State Representative District 94". .www.vote-ok.org. http://www.vote-ok.org/Intro.aspx?State=OK&Id=OKInmanScott. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ Talley, TIm (May 4, 2009). "Democrats name Inman leader designate.". Tulsa World. http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=298&articleid=20090504_298_0_OKLAHO98519. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ "Bob Kalsu profile". www.ou.edu. http://www.ou.edu/rotc/army/bobkalsu.html. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ "Josh Scobey Profile". Scout.com. http://sea.scout.com/a.z?s=114&p=8&c=1&nid=2355616. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ "John Smith Profile". www.okstate.com. http://www.okstate.com/sports/m-wrestl/mtt/smith_john00.html. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
Oklahoma Schools Navigation Mid-Del School District High Schools Middle Schools Carl Albert Middle School · Del Crest Middle School · Jarman Middle School · Kerr Middle School · Monroney Middle SchoolElementary Schools Barnes Elementary · Cleveland Bailey Elementary · Country Estates Elementary · Del City Elementary · East Side Elementary · Epperly Heights Elementary · Highland Park Elementary · Parkview Elementary · Pleasant Hill Elementary · Ridgecrest Elementary · Schwartz Elementary · Soldier Creek Elementary · Sooner Rose Elementary · Steed Elementary · Tinker Elementary · Townsend Elementary · Traub ElementaryOklahoma High School Athletic Districts Oklahoma 6A District 1Choctaw • Edmond Memorial • Eisenhower • Midwest City • Moore • Norman North • Putnam City North • YukonDistrict 2District 3District 4Oklahoma 5A District 1District 2Altus • Ardmore • Capitol Hill • Chickasha • Duncan • Durant • MacArthur • Northwest ClassenDistrict 3Bishop Kelley • Booker T. Washington • Collinsville • McAlester • Memorial • Nathan Hale • Skiatook • Will RogersDistrict 4Oklahoma 4A District 1Bishop McGuinness • Cache • Clinton • Elgin • Elk City • Guymon • iedmontm WoodwardDistrict 2District 3Catoosa • Jay • Mannford • McLain • Miami • Oologah • Vinita • WagonerDistrict 4Oklahoma 3A District 1Anadarko • Blanchard • Bridge Creek • Marlow • Riverside • Tuttle • WeatherfordDistrict 2Dickson • Lone Grove • Madill • Pauls Valley • Plainview • Purcell • SulphurDistrict 3District 4Bethel • Bristow • Chandler • Little Axe • Perkins-Tryon • Prague • Star SpencerDistrict 5Berryhill • Blackwell • Cascia Hall • Dewey • Kellyville • Nowata • SperryDistrict 6Inola • Locust Grove • Metro Christian • Sequoyah-Claremore • Sequoyah-Tahlequah • VerdDistrict 7Beggs • Checotah • Henryetta • Keys (Parkhill) • Okmulgee • Roland • Victory ChristianDistrict 8Oklahoma 2A District 1Alva • Chisholm • Hennessey • Oklahoma Christian • Perry • Tonkawa • WatongaDistrict 2Christian Heritage • Crooked Oak • Jones • Lexington • Luther • Millwood • NortheastDistrict 3Comanche • Cordell • Frederick • Hobart • Lindsay • Mt. St. Mary • Walters • WashingtonDistrict 4Antlers • Coalgate • Davis • Kingston • Konawa • Marietta • TishomingoDistrict 5Haskell • Holdenville • Meeker • Morris • Mounds • Okemah • StroudDistrict 6Hartshorne • Heavener • Panama • Pocola • Talihina • Vian • WilburtonDistrict 7Caney Valley • Chelsea • Chouteau-Mazie • Lincoln Christian • Newkirk • Pawhuska • PawneeDistrict 8Adair • Colcord • Commerce • Kansas • Ketchum • Quapaw • Salina • WyandotteOklahoma A District 1Beaver • Fairview • Hooker • Mooreland • Oklahoma Bible Academy • Texhoma • Thomas-Fay-Custer • TurpinDistrict 2Cashion • Crescent • Hinton • Minco • Okeene • Pioneer-Pleasant Vale • WellstonDistrict 3Apache • Burns Flat-Dill City • Carnegie • Hollis • Mangum • Sayre • SnyderDistrict 4Bray-Doyle • Empire • Healdton • Ringling • Velma-Alma • Waurika • WilsonDistrict 5Dibble • Elmore City-Pernell • Maysville • Rush Springs • Stratford • Wayne • WynnewoodDistrict 6Central-Sallisaw • Gore • Haileyville • Porum • Quinton • Savanna • Warner • WewokaDistrict 7Barnsdall • Drumright • Hominy • Liberty • Morrison • Woodland • YaleDistrict 8Oklahoma B District 1Canton • Cherokee • Garber • Geary • Kremlin-Hillsdale • Laverne • Merritt • Pond Creek-Hunter/Wakita • Ringwood • SeilingDistrict 2Alex • Bowlegs • Central High • Cyril • Davenport • Fox • Macomb • Oklahoma Christian Academy • Paoli • SasakwaDistrict 3Allen • Caddo • Canadian • Cave Springs • Dewar • Gans • Keota • Victory Life • Weleetka • WetumkaDistrict 4Agra • Copan • Depew • Kiefer • Oaks Mission • South Coffeyville • Summit Christian • Watts • Welch • Wesleyan ChristianOklahoma C District 1Balko • Boise City • Buffalo • Forgan • Goodwell/Yarbrough • Sharon-Mutual • Shattuck • Tyrone • WaynokaDistrict 2Cement • Corn Bible Academy • Duke • Grandfield • Mt. View-Gotebo • Ryan • Temple • Thackerville • TiptonDistrict 3Carney • Covington-Douglass • Coyle • Deer Creek-Lamont • Medford • Southwest Covenant • Timberlake • WaukomisDistrict 4Arkoma • Bluejacket • Bokoshe • Claremore Christian • Kinta • Maud • Midway • Prue • Webbers FallsSource : Oklahoma Secondary Schools Activities Association Coordinates: 35°26′45″N 97°26′24″W / 35.44587°N 97.439958°W
Categories:- High schools in Oklahoma
- Schools in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
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