Noblesville High School | |
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Location | |
Noblesville, Indiana, USA | |
Information | |
Type | Public high school |
Established | 1996 |
Locale | City |
Superintendent | Dr. Libbie Conner |
Assistant Superintendent: | Dr. Steven Stephanoff |
Faculty | 143 |
Grades | 9-12 |
Number of students | 2400+ |
Website | [1] |
Noblesville High School is a public high school in Noblesville, Indiana, United States. Opened in 1996, the school is the third for the city. The first two are still in use today for the city with the last high school becoming Noblesville Middle School. The school has approximately 2,400 students in grades 9 to 12. The 2007-2008 school year marked the first year that Noblesville High School only supported grades 10 to 12 because of the Noblesville Freshman Campus, which opened in 2007. Grades 10-12 attend Noblesville High School Main Campus. The school day goes from 7:35 in the morning until 2:35 in the afternoon.
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Noblesville is an original member of the Indiana High School Athletic Association, one of fifteen schools listed as charter members in the IHSAA Handbook of 1928.
Noblesville has won eight state championships:[1]
Noblesville High School is recognized as a school with above-average academics. There is a math department, English department, foreign language department, social studies department, science department, business department, performing arts department, visual arts department, home economics department, and a physical education department. Several Honors and AP classes are offered in each department.
The performing arts department includes an orchestra program, a band program which includes a marching band and a jazz band, a choir program, a music program consisting of music theory and history courses, and a Theater program with both acting and technical theater courses.
For its Senior students, NHS once offered an "honor code," where students could leave campus during lunch and during study hall. They could also sign themselves out for scheduled appointments outside of school. However, the Indiana state Board of Education disagreed with this policy, and it was done away with in August 2010.
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