Skyline High School (Dallas, Texas)

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Skyline High School
Principal Harold Wright
School type Public
School district Dallas Independent School District
Founded 1970
Location Dallas, Texas
Mascot Raider
School colors Columbia Blue and Scarlet Red

Skyline High School is a secondary school in Dallas, Texas. It was the first high school in the United States to offer a magnet school curriculum.[1]

Skyline serves grades 9 through 12 and is a part of the Dallas Independent School District.

Contents

[edit] History

In the mid-1960s, B. J. Stamps and other Dallas educators conceived the idea of a very large high school for the Dallas Independent School District that would offer career education in addition to a traditional high-school curriculum. Stamps emphasized continually that the facility he envisioned was "absolutely not going to be a vocational school for unsuccessful students" but rather a place where superior students could undertake studies in preparation for a variety of professions. In December 1966, architectural plans for the school, whose working name was "Science-Technical Center," were approved by the Dallas School Board. By 1969, Stamps, who had been slated as the school's first principal, suggested the name "Skyline High School," inspired by the view of the Downtown Dallas skyline afforded from the school's upper floors, and in February of 1970 the Skyline name was approved by the School Board.[2][3][4]

Classes at Skyline began in the fall semester of 1970. Until the main facility at 7777 Forney Road opened early in 1971, instruction was held at other southeast Dallas sites. From its inception, Skyline has fulfilled Stamps's original conception of offering both a regular high-school curriculum and a multitude of magnet school programs. The magnet offerings are organized as clusters, which are collectively called the Career Development Center. A student attending Skyline may generally choose from among three options: pursuing a normal, traditional curriculum; attending both a cluster and regular classes at Skyline; or attending a Skyline cluster for a portion of the day and regular classes at his or her neighborhood high school for the remainder.

In the early years of Skyline's existence, administrators and faculty of existing, traditional high schools in the Dallas Independent School District frequently expressed resentment of Skyline's desire to recruit their talented and gifted students and in some instances actively resisted recruitment efforts. District officials appointed a task force to address these concerns.[5] Nevertheless, with the continued existence of Skyline's magnet programs and the subsequent "spinning off" of several independent magnet schools, the issue has persisted to the present day, and district officials continue efforts to allay feelings of resentment.[6]

Over time, numerous clusters have left Skyline and moved into facilities of their own, becoming full-fledged DISD magnet high schools. For example, the Performing Arts Cluster and the Health Careers Cluster both discontinued their affiliations with Skyline in 1976 and became, respectively, the (presently-named) Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and the High School for the Health Professions (now the School of Health Professions at Yvonne A. Ewell Townview Magnet Center). In 2007, district officials announced a plan to relieve overcrowding at Skyline by moving several Skyline magnet programs to Emmett J. Conrad High School, meanwhile hoping to increase the latter's achievement levels. These actions have in some instances occasioned resentment by Skyline's own faculty and educational community, who have worried that Skyline's Career Development Center was created only to ultimately self-destruct, and, in the most recent events, that successful students educated at Skyline are being used to artificially boost another school's academic standing. District officials continue in their efforts to respond to these controversies.[7][8][9]

Skyline served grades 10 and 11 in 1970–1971, and grades 10–12 from 1971 to 1976. The school has included grades 9–12 since the fall of 1976.

[edit] School data

  • Mission: Our mission is to empower our students with the knowledge, skills, integrity, and work ethic to prepare them for life in a globally competitive market.
  • Motto: "Unity in Effort...Pride in Result"
  • Enrollment: 5,031 during the 2006-2007 school year
  • Number of teachers: 295 during the 2006-2007 school year

Trustee district: District 9

Area: Area East - Ivonne Durant

[edit] School performance

Skyline High School, although being a magnet school, has had a longstanding reputation for having an overall below-state TAKS testing average. Currently, Skyline is undergoing a process to make it into an Exemplary School. [10]

A team of Skyline students won the United States National Academic Championship in 1985.[11]

[edit] Alma mater

Skyline Alma Mater

Skyline, our Alma Mater,
Proudly we proclaim
Our respects to all your standards,
Honor to your name.
Guidance, knowledge, inspiration,
We receive from you.
Hail to thee our Alma Mater.
Hail to Skyline High.

[edit] Fight song

Skyline Fight Song

Hit the team across the field.
Show them that we are here.
Set the earth reverberating
With a mighty cheer...Rah! Rah! Rah!
Hit them hard and see how they fall.
Never let that team get the ball.
So hail, hail, the gang's all here.
So stand up for Skyline High!

[edit] Feeder patterns

Elementary schools that feed into Skyline include Frank Guzick, Edna Rowe, Ascher Silberstein, George W. Truett, and Urban Park. [1]

Harold W. Lang, Sr. Middle School and John B. Hood Middle School (partial [2] [3]) feed into Skyline [4].

[edit] Notable alumni

  • Brian Berkeley '74, co-designer of Apple Macintosh II computer
  • Brent Bourgeois '74, Christian rock musician and producer
  • "Cowboy Troy" Coleman '89, country music artist
  • Terry Crouch '77, NFL football player
  • Julie Dam '89, People magazine senior editor and "chick lit" author
  • Deryl Dodd '82, country music artist
  • Richard Dominguez '79, comic book artist
  • Kyle Gann '73, postclassical composer and music critic
  • Peri Gilpin '79, actress (best known as "Roz Doyle" on Frasier)
  • Chris Holt '90, major league baseball player
  • Steve Holy '90, country music singer
  • Tim Jackson '85, NFL football player
  • Larry Johnson '87, NBA basketball star
  • Michael Johnson '86, world and Olympic champion sprinter
  • Mark Michnevitz '97, renowned scientist and engineer
  • Dante Jones '83, NFL football player
  • Gentry Little '82, Texas HS Sportscaster of 2006, recently called his 800th game on radio
  • Lanham Lyne '72, mayor of Wichita Falls, Texas
  • Anthony McSpadden '88, Internationally known Classical Music broadcast personality and program director
  • Calvin "C. J." Miles, Jr. '05, NBA basketball player
  • (Neal) Keith Miller '80, major league baseball player
  • Allen Rossum '94, NFL football player
  • Michael Weiss '76, jazz pianist, composer, bandleader, recording artist
  • Rodney "London" Williams '91, entertainment executive
  • Antonio Wilson '95, NFL football player
v  d  e
Dallas Independent School District
High schools full list Adams | Adamson | Carter | Conrad | Hillcrest | Jefferson | Kimball | Lincoln | Madison | Molina | North Dallas | Pinkston | Roosevelt | Samuell | Seagoville | Skyline | Smith | South Oak Cliff | Spruce | Sunset | W. T. White | Wilson
Middle schools full list Anderson | Hill | Marsh | Quintanilla
Elementary schools full list Hooe | Preston Hollow
Magnet schools Townview magnets: Government, Law, & Law Enforcement | Science and Engineering Magnet | Talented & Gifted | Business and Management | Education and Social Services | Health Professions
Other High Schools: Washington HS for Performing and Visual Arts | Lincoln Humanities/Communications Magnet | Skyline
Middle/High: Rangel Young Women's | PreK-8: Dealey Montessori | Stone Montessori | 4-8: Travis Academy/Vanguard

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Super Highs Sought: Estes Unveils Plan for Specialty Schools." The Dallas Morning News, 29 August 1971.
  2. ^ "Plans OK'd For Big New Dallas School" by Carolyn Barta. The Dallas Morning News, 15 December 1966.
  3. ^ "Science Technical Center: School Getting New Image" by Judy Wiessler. The Dallas Morning News, 15 December 1969.
  4. ^ "Students to Have Say In Naming of School." The Dallas Morning News, 26 February 1970.
  5. ^ "Resentment Reported: Magnet Recruiting Rift Probed." Dallas Times Herald, 15 March 1977.
  6. ^ "Magnet map attracts blog views." The Dallas Morning News, 16 January 2008.
  7. ^ "Magnets Attract Skyline Success" by Eric Miller. Dallas Times Herald, 30 August 1976.
  8. ^ "Skyline High School parents speak out against plan to move magnet programs to Conrad High" by Tawnell D. Hobbs. The Dallas Morning News, 17 January 2008.
  9. ^ "Supporters try to prevent loss of Skyline magnet programs" by Kent Fischer. The Dallas Morning News, 12 January 2008.
  10. ^ Skyline High School Test Scores - Dallas, Texas - TX
  11. ^ National Academic Championship highlights. Retrieved 2008-02-28.
Preceded by
Wheelersburg High School
National Academic Championship champion
1985
Succeeded by
Irmo High School