Niles West High School

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Niles West High School
Image:Niles West.gif
Established 1959
Type Public secondary
Principal Dale Vogler
Students 2,654
Grades 9–12
Location 5701 Oakton
Skokie, Illinois USA
Campus Suburban
Colors Red, White, black
Mascot Wolves
Yearbook Spectrum
Newspaper West Word
Website www.niles-hs.k12.il.us/west

Niles West High School, or NWHS, is a public four-year high school located in Skokie, Illinois, a North Shore suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. It is part of Niles Township Community High School District 219, which also includes Niles North High School. The school enrolls at least 2,600 students, which exceeds Niles North by 300 students. [1]

Contents

[edit] History

In 1996, the Niles Township Federation of Teachers went on a strike for two weeks over negotiations with administrators. During that time numerous students staged a walkout and pledged their alliegance to Niles West. Strikes have also happened in 1979 and 1985 and the same things happened.

In the spring of 2004, four teachers were denied contract renewal a month before their tenure. The teachers, including the theatre director Kevin Wall, were let go unanimously at a public vote by the school board for undisclosed reasons. Many students, parents, and community members attended the meeting in protest.

On the night of October 30, 2006, someone (name not released by the police) who posted a threat to this page was revealed to be a freshman. This was reported to the school by an administrator and removed from the page's history, and the student was charged with felony disorderly conduct. Although the district occasionally gets involved in a criminal case, this is the first time Wikipedia gets involved with the district. In fact, the police scanned all 5,000 students in the district the following day following the incident.[1]

[edit] Academics

In 2006, Niles West had an average composite ACT score of 21.7, and graduated 95.2% of its senior class. The average class size is 18.3. Niles West has not made Adequate Yearly Progress on the Prairie State Achievement Examination, a state test part of the No Child Left Behind Act.[2]

Niles West has recently been honored with the following:

  • Outstanding Biology Teacher of the Year
  • Two Illinois History Teachers of the Year
  • DECA students place second in the nation
  • Qualified whole team in ICTM Math Team competitions in 2005 and 1999
  • Highest percentile of students involved in extracurricular activities in the Northshore (35.4%).
  • Illinois State Champions Science Olympiad in 1999; second place in state (19th in country) in 2006

[edit] Schedule

For many years the schedule had been based on 15-minute periods known as 'mods' with the last 5 minutes of a class being used as a passing period. The first mod was for a 10-minute homeroom, while most classes were 3 mods long (except for lab classes, which were 4 mods). Normal school days lasted 29 mods, although most students had the 29th mod free. Often, students had free mods between classes; these mods allowed variable amounts of free time to students.

A new change instituted at the start of the 2005-2006 school year included a switch to a schedule similar to that of New Trier High School with nine 42-minute classes, and the possibility of taking physical education early morning, before classes officially begin. Homeroom has been moved to the middle of the day in an effort to prevent students from missing it.

The switch to the newer scheduling system was done largely without community support. In the 2004 tax referendum, one of the concerns was that if the referendum would not pass, the mod system would be changed to a period system. When the referendum did pass, the Board of Education again made the schedule an issue in the contract negotiations later that year, allowing them to change the schedule as long as a public hearing was made. This public hearing had no discernible effect on the rescheduling plans.

One of the arguments used for and against the new schedule concerns school security. Supporters of the rescheduling believe that a reduction in students' free time will reduce the frequency of altercations. Opponents have made the claim that by having almost the entire school in the halls at one time is more dangerous, both because the halls become very crowded very commonly, and because if something (e.g. a super brawl) happens security personal are less able to move to the scene of the incident.

[edit] Technology

  • Multiple computer labs, including one "walk-in" lab
  • Technology Leadership Program, where students help other students and/or senior citizens
  • Cisco IPTV, being phased out and replaced by similar on-demand internet videos
  • Sponsorship of http://www.digitalstories.org
  • Dell Computers in every science room, approx. 70-80 laptops (may be shared with Niles North High School)
  • Computers in each department's "Resource Center"
  • VoIP phones in every class room
  • "Language Lab", with top-of-the-line computers linked with the teachers to allow the instructors full control
  • E-mail and storage (accessible at home via POP3, IMAP, and FTP) for all students and staff
  • A/V lab with around 12 eMacs for multimedia editing

[edit] Athletics

Niles West competes in the Central Suburban League and Illinois High School Association. Its mascot is the Wolves.

Until October of 2000, the sports teams were known as Niles West Indians, a name which was changed to the Wolves so as not to offend Native Americans, despite protests from many alumni and community members and one member of the Board of Education. The school colors are still red and white, although wolf murals and symbolism appear throughout the school.

After the 2004-2005 boys' basketball season, head coach Dave Genis was fired for unsportsmanlike conduct as head coach despite his strong performance as head coach for three years. Although Genis was assured he would not lose his job after a profane argument with athletic director Steve Heuerman, he was terminated shortly after the argument. The Chicago Sun-Times reported on July 19, 2006 that a judge ruled in Genis' favor in his lawsuit against the school after he claimed his firing was due to District 219's anti-union bias. [3]

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/newsroom/chi-061031niles-threat,1,4547563.story?coll=chi-newsroom-hed
  2. ^ Illinois School Report Card
  3. ^ http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-coach19.html

[edit] External links