Quartz Hill High School
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Name |
Quartz Hill High School |
Address |
6040 West Avenue L |
Location |
Quartz Hill, California |
Established |
1964 |
Community |
Suburban |
Type |
Public |
Principal |
Mark Bryant |
Grades |
9 to 12 |
Accreditation |
Western Association of Schools and Colleges |
Mascot |
The Rebel |
Colors |
Blue and Gold |
Newspaper |
The Ubiquity |
Yearbook |
The Cavalier |
Website |
Quartz Hill High School is a public, co-educational high school located in Quartz Hill, California. Founded in 1964, it is the third oldest comprehensive high school in the Antelope Valley Union High School District.
Contents |
Campus
The basic layout of Quartz Hill High School's eighty-acre campus is a courtyard surrounded by several quads and athletic buildings,[citation needed] a design that is typical of high schools in Southern California.[citation needed] The school's campus was originally designed for 1,800 students, but over two times that number are currently enrolled.[citation needed]
From the summer of 2003 to the fall of 2004, Quartz Hill High School's campus underwent a $15 million modernization that updated the majority of the school's classrooms.[citation needed]
Student Body
Quartz Hill High School consists of approximately 3,900 students, and the school's population is growing. Most of the school's students live in Quartz Hill, Palmdale and Lancaster, cities in the Antelope Valley of northern Los Angeles County.[citation needed]
- American Indian: 0.8%
- Pacific Islander: 0.03%
- Filipino: 1.8%
- Asian: 3.2%
- African American: 8.4%
- Hispanic: 15.3%
- White: 70.2%
Academics
Quartz Hill High School is one of 65 high schools in California to offer the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme, which began at the school in 1998. Advanced Placement (AP) classes are also available in nearly all academic departments.[citation needed]
Quartz Hill High School is consistently ranked as the top school in its district and one of the top schools in the state according to the Academic Performance Index.[citation needed]
Quartz Hill High School is the only school in the district to have a student receive a perfect score on the SATs.[citation needed]
Activities
Activities at Quartz Hill High School include[citation needed]
- Associated Student Body (ASB), which organizes dances, assemblies and other events that promote school spirit
- American Cancer Society (ACS)
- National Honor Society (NHS)
- Model United Nations
- Animal Rights Club
- Amnesty International Club
- Key Club
- Hiking Club
- Young Democrats Club
- Young Republicans Club
- Future Farmers of America (FFA)
- Multicultural Club
- The Ubiquity, a student-run newspaper
- Cavalier, the class that produces the school's yearbook
- California Scholarship Federation (CSF)
- Spanish Club
- French Club
- German Club
- Asian Pacific Club
- Game Club
- Marine Biology Club
- Marching Band
- Mock Trial
- Christian Club
- Armed Forces Club
Sports
The sports program at Quartz Hill High School includes football, baseball, softball, basketball, soccer, cross country, track and field, tennis, swimming, wrestling, volleyball and golf.[citation needed]
The mascot of Quartz Hill High School is the Rebel, a confederate soldier. Rebel teams began interscholastic competition in the mid-1960s.[citation needed]
The Cross Country team of 1979 was the first of any sport at QHHS to win the CIF-SS Championship.
The Wrestling team was the Golden League Champions for 10 consecutive years.
In 1990, Quartz Hill competed in Southern Section football in Division I for the first time. The unheralded Rebels won playoff games on the road against Eisenhower High School and Mater Dei High School to reach a sectional championship for the first time. The Rebels fell to Loyola High School, 24-14, in the championship game at Anaheim Stadium.
In 2002, The Quartz Hill men's Soccer team set history within the Antelope Valley being the first team ever to win a CIF Championship at the Division 1 level. Led by Kiel McClung (CIF Player of the Year), the Rebels finished undefeated at 28-0-2. The Rebels scored 118 goals for, and only allow 18 goals against. The Rebels 118 goals finished 4th all time in most goals scored in a season in CIF history. The Rebels finished the 2002 season ranked #3 in the nation.
In 2006 the Quartz Hill Baseball team won the first ever C.I.F. championship in the Antelope Valley for baseball. The team went 24-5 overall, including 10-2 in Golden League play. The team beat Murrieta Valley 10-4.Calvin Culver was named CIF division 3 player of the year from that team,Kyle Harris,Chase Tigert,and Matt Hutchinson played a very big role in the success of the championship season. Brett Shaeffing was the catcher. The Rebels were coached by Aaron Kavanagh
Mission statements
Mission Statement: The mission of Quartz Hill High School is to produce responsible citizens who are able to communicate effectively, set and achieve realistic goals, and who become life long learners.
Vision Statement: Quartz Hill High School desires to provide the staff with training, instruction and modeling to improve the instructional strategies, curriculum offerings, and learning for all students. It is the school’s vision that all students will reinforce their fundamental academic skills through the use of appropriate instruction, current technology, and an environment most conducive to learning. The school desires to equip staff with the skills which will assist in providing all students opportunities for post-high school success.
Planned school attack
On December 15, 2005, two former Quartz Hill students were arrested for planning a Columbine style massacre at the school. The two youths allegedly intended to attack the school on St. Valentine's Day of 2006. News reports described them as goths and indicated that they had accumulated knives, ammunition, a gas mask and bomb-making instructions. They were charged on December 19, 2005 with conspiracy to commit murder.[1][2]
Tensions flared again on January 13, 2006, when a rumor that the former students who had been arrested would again attempt to attack the school using pipe-bombs. According to Principal Mark Bryant, the planned attacks were merely "rumor, upon rumor, upon rumor", as the two youths are still being held in custody. This "Friday the 13th" rumor was passed between students via internet messages and cell-phone text messages. In response to the threat, nearly 50% of the student body was absent from the campus by the time the school day had finished. In the end, the only disruption to the day was a firecracker explosion within a trash can during the school's lunch break.[3][4]
Notable alumni
- Michelle Perry - Silver medalist in heptathlon, at NCAA Outdoor Championships in 2001 [1], competitor in the 2004 Summer Olympics.
- Kiel McClung - Professional Soccer Player USL First Division
References
- ^ "Teen Enters Plea In Alleged Columbine-Style Attack Plan", KNBC, April 10, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-03-31.
- ^ "Man pleads no contest in Quartz Hill High murder plot", The San Diego Union-Tribune, December 15, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-03-31.
- ^ Associated Press. "Rumors of attack keep hundreds away from high school", The San Diego Union-Tribune, January 14, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-03-31.
- ^ Karen Maeshiro. "ATTACK RUMOR FRIGHTENS KIDS HUNDREDS STAY AWAY FROM QUARTZ HILL HIGH", Daily News (Los Angeles), January 14, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-03-31.