Novi High School

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Novi High School
Location
24062 Taft Rd.
Novi, Michigan, 48375
USA
Coordinates 42°27′50″N 83°29′24″W / 42.4638°N 83.49°W / 42.4638; -83.49Coordinates: 42°27′50″N 83°29′24″W / 42.4638°N 83.49°W / 42.4638; -83.49
Information
School type Public high school
Motto A Commitment to Excellence
Established 1968
School district Novi Community School District
Principal Nicole Carter
Assistant principals Charles LaClear
Nicole Carter
Faculty 189
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 2,000
Student to teacher ratio 10.3
Campus size 500,000 sq. ft.
Campus type Suburb
Color(s) Green and white          
Mascot Wildcat
Website novi.k12.mi.us/hs/

Novi High School (commonly Novi or NHS) is a public secondary school in Novi, Michigan, United States in Greater Detroit, serving students in grades 912. It is operated by Novi Community School District and was awarded Blue Ribbon School status in 1986-87 and 1999-00. Novi currently enrolls about 2,000 students and has a 200 strong faculty.

In addition to its primary purpose, Novi High School also houses adult education and various community recreational events, such as open swim in the swimming pool and basketball games in the gym and fieldhouse. The high school has been the venue for numerous competitions including state band festival and regional football, tennis, soccer, and volleyball matches.

History

Novi High School was first opened in 1968 and graduated its first class in 1969. Prior to 1968, high school students from the Novi district attended Northville schools. The high school started out in a rural community that saw a tremendous amount of growth between the late 1960s to the late 2000s, and subsequently, the growth of the school. The massive influx of students from the 1980s to today led to several renovations and expansions of the high school.[citation needed]

The first high school was located in the current Novi Meadows school at Taft and 11 Mile Roads which was built in 1968 and opened to students that fall. Explosive growth began in Novi during the 1970s and the district quickly outgrew the old high school, forcing the district to build the current high school which opened in the Fall of 1977. The current school was built on a portion of the Fuerst family farm. The Fuerst sisters sold the property to the school district, spurning residential developers who were seeking the prime piece of property located in the heart of Novi. At the time it was sold, the property was located in the Northville School District. The Fuerst property and several surrounding properties to the east, west and north were annexed from the Northville School District into the Novi School District. The Fuerst sisters were honored with the naming of the school auditorium after them. Over the years, much of the proceeds from the sale were returned to the school district through gifts to the school district by the sisters, who continued to live on the homestead until their deaths.[citation needed]

The first renovation of the high school occurred from 1993 to 1996, boosting the building capacity by 40%. More importantly, this renovation brought in then-state-of-the-art technology, including a telecommunications system, science labs, and a fine arts complex, effectively transitioning the school to a modern education institution. Coinciding with the renovation, the community also increased funding for education, resulting in a significant migration into the city.[citation needed]

The rapid increase of students quickly filled the renovated high school to capacity in a mere 5 years, creating debate among board members, employees, and residents regarding future action. Ultimately, a sixty-member committee in 2001 voted in favor of a second renovation over plans to build a second high school in Novi.[citation needed]

In 2001 a $75.6-million bond proposal passed. A $37-million expansion and renovation that followed included an expansion of the cafeteria; a renovation of the auditorium with a new sound system, new seating, and new carpeting; and a new fine arts wing with a choir room, a black box theater, and a dance studio.[1]

These renovations took three years and added a new wing of classrooms, media center, black box theater, wireless technology, sports complex, three art rooms, music wing with a dance studio, and most notably, the glass atrium between the classrooms and the old cafeteria. The renovations also improved the swimming pool, football stadium, baseball field, broadcasting equipment, auditorium, gym, classrooms, restrooms, and parking lot. The second renovation increased the area of the school by another 35%, making the school among the largest buildings in the area.[citation needed]

Around 2005 Advanced Placement classes became increasingly popular among students at Novi High School.[2] By that year, the school had converted to block scheduling.[3] In 2005 the athletic department canceled a proposal to require student athletes to undergo drug testing.[4]

In 2010, Novi High School announced that it would become an IB Accredited school. The first graduates of the high school with IB Diplomas will graduate in 2012.

Academics

Novi operates on a 7:15 a.m. to 1:55 p.m. schedule, which as of 2011-2012 includes six periods and a break for lunch, divided into three sessions. Up until 2010-2011 the schedule was four blocks. Although there are six available periods, students may opt to take some courses, such as Jazz Band or IB Theory of Knowledge, after sixth period if demand is high enough. Furthermore, the school provides students with the opportunity of taking courses not offered at Novi High School at institutions that do, such as Schoolcraft College and the University of Michigan. Novi uses semester scheduling, providing students flexibility and a broader range of course options.

Novi offers 15 Advanced Placement courses as well as numerousInternational Baccalaureate courses, and also the IB Diploma if desired. The school also offers many vocational courses including the option to take some of them at the nearby Oakland Technical Center. In addition, the school offers a Computer-Aided Design Tech Prep program which qualifies its participants for seven college credits at Oakland Community College.

Novi traditionally sends a vast majority of its students to colleges and universities, with large numbers attending Michigan State University, Central Michigan University, the University of Michigan, Western Michigan University, and Grand Valley State University. Students also score among the highest average in the state in both the SAT and the ACT. A number of Novi students have received National Merit Scholarship accolades. A high number of students also received the Promise Scholarship, but this scholarship has since been taken away in 2009.

Demographics

In 2013 Chris Jackett of the Observer & Eccentric wrote that "The halls of Novi High School have long been considered diverse".[5] By 2006 students created a mural reflecting the school's ethnic diversity. It featured ethnicities in non-stereotypical positions, as it had an African-American gymnast and an Asian American football player.[6] In fall 2013 the school had 30 foreign exchange students while in the previous two years combined it had a total of 16 exchange students.[5]

Extracurricular activities

An aerial view of Novi High School (before the 2005 expansion) and the old Novi Public Library.

The extracurricular activities offered at Novi High School are many and varied due to the school's large size. There are chapters of national organizations, such as the National Honor Society, and clubs founded by Novi students, such as Chess Club. The majority of clubs have a primarily social or recreational purpose, but some are academically-inclined, such as quiz bowl and math club. The usual range of athletic and music organizations are there for students to join, in addition to Novi's other clubs. The school also organizes several annual school plays and musical.

Novi High School teams currently compete in Division I, the division designated for the largest schools. Originally founded in 1963, Novi became a member of the Southeastern Conference in 1980. In 1982, Novi joined the Kensington Valley Conference. Since 2008, Novi has participated in the newly formed Kensington Lakes Activities Association, a merger of the current KVC and Western Lakes Activities Association along with some other schools, in the majority of interscholastic sports and activities although some, notably the robotics, drumline, and quiz bowl teams, compete either independently or in other leagues.

Athletics

Novi athletics have placed among the top schools in the region in almost all competing disciplines, and some teams have gone on to capture state championships, including girls' soccer and boys' golf and cross country.

Unlike most schools in the region, Novi fully funds the majority of varsity and junior varsity sports, but some, such as equestrian, skiing, and figure skating, and field hockey, require students to privately pay for uniforms, equipment, competition fees, coaches, and other aspects of their sport. The athletic department devotes the largest percentage of its funding to the football program which recently added a big screen monitor to the field.

Football

While a member of the SEC, Novi's football team captured league championships in 1972, 1973,1974 and 1976, with the previous two finishing undefeated. As a member of the KVC, Novi won outright league titles in 1981, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 2003, and 2004, and shared a league title with Howell in 2007, even though Novi defeated them in season play.

Novi also reached the state semifinals twice, losing both times: in 1988, while competing in Division I, to eventual state champion Traverse City Central 12-13 and in 2003, competing in Division II, to eventual runner-up Birmingham Brother Rice 28-31 in overtime.

The team has won four district titles and also boasts the highest conference winning percentage amongst KLAA teams at .618. The team also has a .642 all-time SEC/KLAA winning percentage.

Other sports

Novi's varsity girls soccer team won three consecutive MHSAA championships between 2005 and 2007, being coached by Brian O'Leary, with players from those squads going on to play in Division I NCAA universities, including the University of Michigan and The Ohio State University.

The boy's cross country team won the MHSAA championship in 1998 and 1999 and finishing as runners-up in 2000 and 2006. The team has finished in the top 10 at the state meet for 9 years in a row. In 2001, Tim Moore was the national champion and continued on to the University of Notre Dame.

Novi wrestling was MHSAA runner-up in 2000 and have produced seven individual state champions since 1996.

Novi basketball Won district championship in 2009-2010 and made their first state sweet-sixteen appearance in their 2009-2010 season under coach Corey Heitsch

The gymnastics team combined with Northville High School to win state championships in 1998 and 2001, while finishing as runners-up in 2002.

The ice hockey team won three consecutive KVC titles from 2000 to 2002 and were regional champions in 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, and 2009. The team won the state championship in 2011 by beating Orchard Lake St. Mary 4-0 at Compuware arena.

Both the boys' and girls' tennis teams traditionally perform well, consistently winning the KLAA and placing in the top 5 in the state. In 2011, class of 2015 Tim Wang, class of 2012 Bill Bell and class of 2013 Jason Carless were named All-State Tennis Players by the MHSTeCA and Andrew Ying, class of 2014, won the programs first ever State Championship for boys (Division 4). In 2013 Novi High School had 3 state champions, Tim Wang won the Division 1 MHSAA State championship, Koushik Kondapi won the Division 3 MHSAA State championship, and Maxx Anderson won the Division 4 State Championship. The Novi Boys Tennis team is among the most decorated of the teams at Novi.

The Varsity Pompon team has been the Class A State Champions for the years of: 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2010, 2011. Div. II State Champions for the year of: 1994. Varsity High Kick Champions for the year of: 1999, 2001, 2002, 2010. Senior High Kick Champions for the year of:2011. The Junior Varsity Pompon team has been State Champions for the years of: 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2010, 2011. JV High Kick Champions for the year of: 2003, 2005, 2009. The pompon teams compete at the Mid American Pompon competitions.

The baseball team won the district championship in 2008 and 2010, and in the season of 2010 had the best record of any Novi baseball team in 30 years. They are also placed among the top teams in the state.

Other extracurricular activities

In 2005, the FIRST robotics team won the FIRST Robotics World Championship. The team also won the Great Lakes Regional in 2007 and 2008 and many other regional competitions as well. The team name is the Frog Force, number 503.

The quiz bowl team has attended the national competition each year since 2005. The team finished third in the 2007 Michigan state championships and placed second in 2008. At the national tournament, the team finished in 8th place in 2011.

Novi's fine arts department offers band,orchestra, dance, choir, and drama programs, all of which have won awards. Novi Drumline recently participated in the WGI World Championships in Dayton, OH. The drumline competes in Percussion Scholastic A class, and qualified for the finals in 2006 and 2007, finishing twelfth both times. The Drumline has also won 2 back to back state championships in 2012 and 2013 and they look to repeat in 2014. The Novi Drumline's long history of success dates back to 1997 when they competed at a world class level. The drumline

The debate team has had three state champions and have been one of the top competitors in their league.

Notable alumni

References

  1. Higgins, Lori. "EXPANDING STUDENTS' HORIZONS AT NOVI HIGH." Detroit Free Press. March 8, 2006. News p. B3. Retrieved on October 28, 2013. "Renee Hadley has studied dance for 15 years, but it was only recently that she was able to take a dance class at Novi High School. The new dance studio there[...]"
  2. "Novi teens flock to AP classes." The Detroit News. January 24, 2005. Retrieved on April 17, 2011.
  3. "High school's new home rates 'Wow!'." The Detroit News. August 24, 2005. ID det22236488. Retrieved on October 28, 2013. "Many schools, including nearby Novi High School, have changed to block scheduling, allowing for longer class periods several days of the week, similar to a[...]"
  4. Mask, Teresa. "NOVI HIGH TO DROP DRUG TEST PROPOSAL FOR STUDENT ATHLETES." Detroit Free Press. March 9, 2005. NWS p. B3. Retrieved on October 28, 2013.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Jackett, Chris. "Teens travel from across three continents to attend Novi High." Observer & Eccentric. Gannett Company. October 8, 2013. Retrieved on October 28, 2013.
  6. Edgar, Julie. "NOVI TEENS USE ART TO UNIFY HIGH SCHOOL." Detroit Free Press. May 26, 2006. News p. B3. Retrieved on October 28, 2013.
  7. Steinberg, Stephanie. "Alum Gupta nominated for surgeon general post." The Michigan Daily. Wednesday January 14, 2009. p. 1A. Retrieved from Google News (1 of 16) on October 28, 2013. "[...]School in 1993. He also grew up in nearby Novi, Mich., and attended Novi High School."
  8. "CHANGE OF PLANS, -- MITCH MAIER ONCE DREAMED OF PLAYING COLLEGE FOOTBALL, BUT A SWITCH OF SPORTS IS WORKING OUT WELL FOR THE WRANGLERS' OUTFIELDER." Wichita Eagle. April 6, 2006. Sports p. 1C. Retrieved on October 28, 2013. "After graduating from Novi (Mich.) High in 2000, he was planning to attend Michigan as a preferred walk-on. "I was packed and ready to go," Maier said."
  9. "Olympic spotlight: Bobsledder Michelle (Mickie) Rzepka." Detroit Free Press. October 4, 2009. Sports p. C10. Retrieved on October 28, 2013. "A 2001 graduate of Novi High, Rzepka was a Big Ten indoor and outdoor[...]"
  10. "Michigan's Olympic Connections." (Archive) Associated Press at WILX-TV. February 12, 2010. Retrieved on October 28, 2013. "Samuelson graduated from Novi High School, and Bates from Ann Arbor Huron[...]"

Further reading

External links

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