Bettendorf High School

Bettendorf High School (BHS) is a four-year comprehensive high school located in Bettendorf, Iowa. Roughly 100 instructors teach more than 1500 students using a four-period block daily schedule with 85 minute blocks, BHS also offers classes as 40 minutes skinny's which meet all year for 40 minutes each day.

Bettendorf High School
Bettendorf High front view from 18th Street
Location
Bettendorf, Iowa, USA
Information
Type Public secondary school
Established 1951
Principal Jimmy S. Casas
Faculty 100
Grades 9–12
Number of students 1,445 [1]
School Colour(s)      black
     gold
Mascot Bulldog
Website

Contents

History

Early history

Prior to its opening in 1951, there was no high school in Bettendorf. High school-age students living in the city had to go to Davenport High School or Le Claire High School to receive their secondary education.

The original BHS building was completed in 1951 at a site between 21st and 23rd streets south of Central Avenue. Previously, Bettendorf students attended grades 9–12 at Davenport High School or Le Claire High School. In its very early years, the high school housed seventh through 12th grade students, although junior high students were moved by the late 1950s.

The community of Bettendorf quickly grew during the 1950s and 1960s, and by the early 1960s, the district had outgrown the school due to increasing enrollment. Students walked to some classes in rented store fronts on State and Grant Streets, while an annex building (which later became Neil Armstrong Elementary) also helped serve students. By 1971, with enrollment still growing at a fast pace, plans were started to build a new high school along 18th Street in the northern part of the city, roughly 1½ miles north of Middle Road.

The former BHS building had a track/baseball field on the front side and a football field on the back side; both are still evident at the site. The old school's athletic facilities were used for a number of years after the opening of the new high school. The old football field was used on a varsity level until 1980, when Touvelle Stadium was completed, while the old BHS gymnasium was utilized by lower level teams until the mid 1980s. Today, the old BHS building is the headquarters for the Mississippi Bend Area Education Agency District 9, which oversees public school education across east-central Iowa.

Current high school

The current high school building was completed in 1973, at a cost of roughly $3 million. (The old high school currently sees use as the Mississippi Bend Area Education Agency headquarters, which oversees academic instruction at high schools in eastern Iowa.) At the time of its opening, BHS was on the edge of town, surrounded by mostly undeveloped land. A subsequent addition added a new industrial arts/locker room and an athletic stadium completed in 1980. The six-building, air-conditioned complex is highlighted by a landscaped inner courtyard, planetarium, library/media center, computer labs, a 405 seat auditorium, and a field house with a 6-lane, 25-yard swimming pool. In 2007, an addition to the music and drama area was completed.

A new 7,500-square-foot (700 m2) facility is attached to the east side of the high school and accessible to all athletic and physical education areas. The center houses weights and exercise and cardiovascular equipment.

A group of community members organized the BHS Fitness Education Center Committee and raised $300,000 in funds for the fitness education center at Bettendorf High School. The Bettendorf School Board matched $300,000 to fund the $600,000 project. The project was completed in the summer of 2002.

The current high school is split into different sections, the main floor includes the media center, Modern Language classrooms, Business Department classrooms, Gymnasium and Athletic facilities, Attendance/Guidance/Main Offices, E Locker Bay and B Locker Bay. Upstairs includes History classrooms along with Math/Science classrooms, and Upper-D Locker Bay. Downstairs includes the cafeteria, English classrooms, Art and Industrial Tech areas, the BHS Pool, along with athletic locker rooms and Lower-D academic locker bay.

In 2010, copies of the student newspaper, The Growl, were confiscated by school administrators because of an article about inconsistent disciplinary action against students, specifically athletes.[2][3][4][5]

Renovations to the current high school are currently underway.[6]

Community

Bettendorf is a community with more than 30,000 people; the median age of the residents is 34 years. More than 30 percent of adults are college graduates with 10 percent holding postgraduate degrees.

The Bettendorf School District serves 4,500 students with a high school, middle school and six elementary schools.

4x4 block schedule

Students attend four - 85 minute classes each day. Courses are 9 weeks or 18 weeks in length. Students with a block schedule may earn 8 credits per year. Mid-term reports are issued to students each quarter and final grades are given each 9 weeks. BHS also offers year long courses in a 40-minute skinny, students with skinny classes have 2 classes in each block (40 minutes each) with 5 minute passing between. The school serves 2 lunches, A and B lunches take place during 3rd block, students attend a lunch which is determined by 3rd block classes.[7] [8]

Staff

The Bettendorf High School instructional staff consists of 100 teachers and two media specialists. The staff is supported by five counselors, two attendance clerks, a nurse and twenty-seven support staff. The administrative team consists of the building principal, Jimmy S. Casas, and three associate principals, Mark Brooks, Matthew Degner and Joy Kelly.[9] [10]

Music

The music department has offerings for students interested in furthering their interest and talents. Opportunities include the Bulldog Marching Band, symphonic band, orchestra, wind ensemble, jazz band, pep band, chorus, and a show choir named 'Surround Sound'. These performing groups have been involved in athletic intermission presentations, state contests, as well as department sponsored trips to contests. The Bulldog Marching Band has won 19 consecutive division 1 ratings at the state marching band competition since 1991.

Athletics

Bettendorf participates in the Mississippi Athletic Conference, and athletic teams are known as the Bulldogs. School colors are black and gold. The school fields athletic teams in 21 sports, including:

The school also has a cheerleading squad and a competitive dance team.

Bettendorf is classified as a 4A school (Iowa's largest 48 schools), according to the Iowa High School Athletic Association and Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union; in sports where there are fewer divisions, the Bulldogs are always in the largest class (e.g., Class 3A for wrestling, boys soccer, and Class 2A for golf, tennis and girls soccer). The school is a member of the 10-team Mississippi Athletic Conference (known to locals as the MAC), which comprises schools from the Iowa Quad Cities, along with Burlington, Clinton and Muscatine high schools.

One notable sport in which Bettendorf has been very successful is football where the Bulldogs have won seven state championships in 1981, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1992, 2004, and 2007. As well, prior to a playoff system in Iowa, the Bulldogs were named the "Mythical State Champions" by the U.P.I. in 1960. Bettendorf has also finished as the Runner-up three times (1980, 2000, 2002) and currently own a 58-17 (77%) playoff record. The Bulldogs frequently make it to the semi-finals at the Uni-Dome on the University of Northern Iowa's campus each fall. The campus hosts the top 4 teams in the playoffs each year. The Bulldogs have had four notable winning streaks: 25-games from 1958–60, 36-games from 1987–89, 30-games from 1991–1993, and 24-games from 2007-2008. Bettendorf has also been ranked nationally on five different occasions by entities such as the L.A. Times, USA Today, and Prep Nation 101.

Three of the Bulldogs' coaches, Merrit Parsons, Mervin Habenicht and Randy Scott are members of the Iowa High School Football Coaches Hall of Fame and Bettendorf has had two players play in the NFL: running back Tavian Banks (Jacksonville Jaguars, 1998–99; New Orleans Saints, 2002–03) and linebacker Pat Angerer (Indianopolis Colts, 2010-current); both Banks and Angerer played for the University of Iowa where they were All-Americans for the Hawkeyes.

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ http://www.bettendorf.k12.ia.us/BCSD_News/I0119CA57.1/Annual%20Report%202010.pdf
  2. ^ McGlynn, Ann (2010-02-06). "Bettendorf High School administration confiscates student newspaper". Quad-City Times. http://qctimes.com/news/local/article_a771a606-139b-11df-8881-001cc4c002e0.html. Retrieved 2010-06-30. 
  3. ^ Ocran, Nicole (2010-02-10). "Student newspaper containing critical article confiscated at Iowa high school". Student Press Law Center. http://www.splc.org/newsflash.asp?id=2026. Retrieved 2010-06-30. 
  4. ^ "Administrators pull Bettendorf school paper". Newsday. Associated Press. http://www.newsday.com/news/nation/administrators-pull-bettendorf-school-paper-1.1751745. Retrieved 2010-06-30. 
  5. ^ "Administrators pull Bettendorf school paper". Associated Press. KTTC. 2010-02-09. http://www.kttc.com/Global/story.asp?S=11960131. Retrieved 2010-06-30. 
  6. ^ "Bettendorf High School Facility Projects". Bettendorf Community Schools. 2011-02-24. http://bhs.bettendorf.k12.ia.us/HS_Facility_Projects/. Retrieved 2011-02-25. 
  7. ^ "About Us". Bettendorf Community Schools. 2011-02-24. http://bhs.bettendorf.k12.ia.us/about/home%20page. Retrieved 2011-02-25. 
  8. ^ "Bell Schedule". Bettendorf Community Schools. 2011-02-24. http://bhs.bettendorf.k12.ia.us/00DCA901-0119ED4B?object=/students/bell%20schedule.pdf&ConfPosition=1&infobar=no. Retrieved 2011-02-25. 
  9. ^ "Falculty". Bettendorf Community Schools. 2011-02-24. http://bhs.bettendorf.k12.ia.us/staff/faculty. Retrieved 2011-08-19. 
  10. ^ "Staff". Bettendorf Community Schools. 2011-02-24. http://bhs.bettendorf.k12.ia.us/staff/. Retrieved 2011-08-19. 

External links