- Duncan U. Fletcher High School
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Duncan U. Fletcher High School
Fletcher CrestEstablished 1937 Type Public Principal Dane Gilbert Admin. staff 152 Students 5,000 Location Neptune Beach, Florida, USA Campus Urban Colors Purple and White Nickname Senators Mascot Senator
hours = 730 A.M.-1:45 P.M.Website http://www.duvalschools.org/fhs/ Duncan U. Fletcher High School is a public high school in the Duval County School District, located in Neptune Beach, Florida.
Contents
History
Former Jacksonville Mayor and U.S. Senator Duncan U. Fletcher obtained a federal grant to build the school which bears his name. It opened September 20, 1937 for grades 7-12. The school’s nickname, Senators, also comes from their namesake. The original building was located in Jacksonville Beach and contained 10 classrooms and began with 269 students from the area east of the ditch (Intracoastal Waterway), south of Mayport and north of Ponte Vedra Beach. The principal was Frank Doggett and there were 13 teachers. [1]
In 1964, the school was split into two schools, with Fletcher Junior High grades 7-8 staying in the original building and Fletcher Senior High grades 9-12 moving to its current location on Seagate Avenue in Neptune Beach, Florida. The Fall 1969 freshman class was the last 9th Grade class to attend the Senior High for over 20 years, as, beginning in Fall 1970, Fletcher Junior High retained the 9th Grade class along with grades 7-8. Fletcher was one of the first schools in Duval County to be integrated, doing so after the new building opened.
In 1991, the 9th grade was moved back from Junior High Schools to Senior High Schools, county-wide. Sixth grade was moved from Elementary Schools to Junior High Schools, which were renamed "Middle Schools". In 1997, Fletcher became a full service school, introducing a Beaches Resource Center on campus.[2]
In 2007, Fletcher tied with Lee High School as the most crowded in Duval County.[3] The high school obtained a new science lab in 2008[4], a critical addition after a 2007 protest by parents about the high school's inadequate science facilities for its 2600 students.[5] Later in 2008, a new master plan for the school proposed the construction of a new wing to replace the school's portable classrooms.[3]
Academics
As of 2008, the school has a "A" on the Florida School Accountability Grading Scale.[6] It is ranked 79th among the 1300 high schools in Newsweek's Top Public High School list[7], a list based on a "Challenge Index" derived for the magazine, which takes the total number of AP, IB or Cambridge tests given at a school in May, and divides it by the number of seniors graduating in May or June. The top 100 ranking was achieved after Newsweek's initial ranking for Fletcher was appealed by the principal.[8]
AP curriculum
Fletcher currently offers 27 Advanced Placement Program (AP) courses.
- Psychology
- Microeconomics
- Macroeconomics
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Environmental Science
- Physics C: Mechanics
- Calculus (AB)
- Statistics
- Latin Literature/Latin: Vergil (alternates annually)
- Spanish Language
- Spanish Literature
- Human Geography
- Comparative Government & Politics
- United States Government & Politics
- Art History
- Studio Art
- Music Theory
Notable alumni
- Candice Carpenter, co-founder of iVillage.[9]
- Carey Cavanaugh, professor and former American ambassador.
- Andre Cooper, Former FSU and NFL player.
- Ben Cooper of the indie pop band Electric President.
- Ciatrick Fason, CFL player.
- Alexander Kane of the indie pop band Electric President.
- Lou Ritter, mayor of Jacksonville 1965 – 1967[citation needed].
- Whitney Thompson, winner of Cycle 10 of America's Next Top Model[citation needed].
- Steven Marshek, Founded the Anvils in 2002 and is now currently in The Lifeforms.
- Noah Jackson, NFL player
- Michael D. Reynolds, State of Florida Teacher of the Year, 1986.
- Tom Sullivan, NFL Football Player
References
- ^ Florida Times-Union: Apr 7, 2007-Fletcher High School grads reach way back for a cause
- ^ "Full service schools catch on; Fletcher joining in". The Florida Times-Union. http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/050397/b4Fletch.html. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
- ^ a b "Officials presenting Fletcher master plan". The Florida Times-Union. http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/051008/nes_277226070.shtml. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
- ^ "There's a chemical reaction at Fletcher". The Florida Times-Union. http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/011208/nes_235422147.shtml. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
- ^ "This year, it's science that's in". The Florida Times-Union. http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/051307/met_169562546.shtml. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
- ^ "School Demographic, Assessment, and Accountability Data". Duval County Public Schools. February 13, 2008. http://www.duvalschools.org/reseval/Schools/SchoolResearchData.asp?School=223. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ "America's Top Public High Schools". Newsweek. June, 2008. http://www.newsweek.com/id/39380/?s=florida. Retrieved 2008-08-23.[dead link]
- ^ "Nease again ranked one of nation's top public schools". The Florida Times-Union. http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/052808/nes_283099301.shtml. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
- ^ "Confidence, leadership propelled Candice Carpenter from Fletcher to Internet CEO". The Florida Times-Union. http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/032600/bus_2545402.html. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
External links
Duval County Public Schools High Schools Douglas Anderson • Atlantic Coast • Baldwin • Darnell Cookman • Englewood • First Coast • Fletcher • Forrest • Jackson • Lee • Mandarin • Terry Parker • Paxon • Peterson • Raines • Randolph • Ribault • Sandalwood • Stanton • Ed White • WolfsonMiddle Schools Arlington • Baldwin • Eugene Butler • Darnell-Cookman • Jefferson Davis • Alfred I. duPont • Duncan Fletcher • John E. Ford • Fort Caroline • Matthew Gilbert • Highlands • James Weldon Johnson • Kernan • Kirby-Smith • Lake Shore • Landmark • Julia Landon College Prep • LaVilla School of the Arts • Mandarin • Mayport • Northwestern • Oceanway • Paxon • Jean Ribault • Southside • Joseph Stilwell • J.E.B. Stuart • Twin Lakes AcademyElementary Schools Abess Park • Alimacani • Arlington • Arlington Heights • Atlantic Beach • J. Allen Axson • Bank of America Learning Academy • Bartram Springs • Bayview • Beauclerc • Biltmore • Biscayne • Brentwood • Don Brewer • Brookview • Richard L. Brown • George W. Carver • Cedar Hills • Central Riverside • Chaffee Trail • Chets Creek • Chimney Lakes • Crown Point • Crystal Springs • Lola M. Culver • R. V. Daniels • Dinsmore • Englewood • Enterprise Learning Academy • Saint Clair Evans Academy • Joseph Finegan • Fishweir • John E. Ford • Fort Caroline • Garden City • Greenfield • Greenland Pines • Gregory Drive • Hendricks Avenue • Highlands • Hogan-Spring Glen • Holiday Hill • Samuel A. Hull • Hyde Grove • Hyde Park • Stonewall Jackson • Jacksonville Beach • Jacksonville Heights • Thomas Jefferson • Mamie Agnes Jones • Justina Road • Kernan Trail • Martin Luther King • Kings Trail • Henry F. Kite • Lake Forest • Lake Lucina • S. P. Livingston • Lone Star • Long Branch • Loretto • Love Grove • John Love • Mandarin Oaks • Sallye B. Mathis • Mayport • Merrill Road • Annie R. Morgan • Neptune Beach • New Berlin • Normandy Village • North Shore • Norwood • Oak Hill • Oceanway • Ortega • Parkwood Heights • Rufus E. Payne • Rutledge H. Pearson • Pickett • Pine Estates • Pine Forest • Pinedale • Ramona Boulevard • Reynolds Lane • Andrew A. Robinson • Sabal Palm • San Jose • San Mateo • San Pablo • Seabreeze • Louis Sheffield • Southside Estates • Spring Park • John N. C. Stockton • Sadie T. Tillis • Timucuan • Susie E. Tolbert • Twin Lakes Academy • Ruth N. Upson • Venetia • Wesconnett • West Jacksonville • West Riverside • Whitehouse • Windy Hill • Woodland Acres • Carter G. WoodsonAlternative Schools Grand Park Center • Marine Science Education Center • Mattie V. Rutherford Alternative Education CenterExceptional Student Centers Alden Road Exceptional Student Center • Mt. Herman Exceptional Student Center •
Palm Avenue Exceptional Student CenterCharter Schools Global Outreach Charter Academy • School of Integrated Academics Tech • SOS Academy - Middle • SOS Academy - High •
Wayman Academy of the Arts • Pathways Academy • River City Science AcademyCoordinates: 30°18′28″N 81°24′05″W / 30.307793°N 81.401291°W
Categories:- Educational institutions established in 1937
- High schools in Jacksonville, Florida
- Duval County Public Schools
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