Bay View High School

Address
2751 S Lenox St
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Milwaukee County
United States
Coordinates 42°59′41″N 87°53′56″W / 42.9946°N 87.89878°W / 42.9946; -87.89878Coordinates: 42°59′41″N 87°53′56″W / 42.9946°N 87.89878°W / 42.9946; -87.89878
Information
Motto Believe in Bay View
Founded 1914
School district Milwaukee Public Schools
NCES District ID 5509600[1]
Superintendent Dr. Darienne Drive
CEEB code 501335 [2]
NCES School ID 550960001127[3]
Principal Aaron Shapiro[4]
Teaching staff 36.42 (FTE)
Grades 6–12
Gender Co-ed
Sports Football, Track (B/G), Basketball (B/G), Wrestling, Tennis (B/G), Volleyball (G), Soccer (B)
Mascot Redcat
Newspaper Oracle [5]
Yearbook Oracle[5]
Website www5.milwaukee.k12.wi.us/school/bayview

Bay View Middle/High School (BVMHS), previously Bay View High School (BVHS), is a high school in Bay View, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is part of the Milwaukee Public Schools. Academic specialties include law, mathematics, science, and construction.

History

Bay View High School opened in September 1914 with 150 students and 7 teachers. The school was then a one-building barracks without central heating. With German teacher Gustav Fritsche as principal, the barracks grew to a bungalow, and in 1922 classes were held in a new school, still in use today.

The four-story brick building was a vast improvement over the wooden barracks. Later renovations included the modernization of rooms and lighting; the separation of the east and west study halls into one-story units, later converted to classrooms; a library; and a little theater/conference center. In 1976, another addition to the building included a gym with 1200 seats for spectators.

The Oracle Newspaper was first issued in 1915. In 1917, the Oracle, then a booklet of 48 half-pages, began publication as a yearbook. With new facilities, athletics became an important extra-curricular activity, and included football, track and field, basketball, swimming and cross country. Early clubs included Girls' Club (1914), Stage Crew (1924), Art Club (1932) and X Club (1938). A student government association was organized in 1947, and the Redcat mascot was adopted in the early 1950s.

mid-20th century to 21st century

Bay View, prior to racial integration, was overwhelmingly populated with residents of Bay View. After desegregation, Bay View's student body changed its composition, and now the school's students come from all over Milwaukee. Older residents felt that the school lost its identity.[6]

In 2010 the school had 1,153 students. 839 students living in the Bay View attendance zone went to other MPS schools, and that year 86 students at Bay View High lived in the school's attendance zone, making up 7.5% of the school's students. In the 2009-2010 school year the State of Wisconsin ranked it as among the lowest performing schools in Wisconsin, and area parents avoided the school due to substandard graduation rates and test scores.[7] In 2012 Bay View was one of the high schools designated by MPS as a "metro school", meaning one of its lowest performing.[8]

In 2010 Bay View became a combined middle and high school after Fritsche Middle School was consolidated into it.[7]

The projected enrollment for fall 2011 was 1,761. That year a group of area parents started a grass-roots advocacy to have a university preparatory program at Bay View High due to the difficulty in admissions in area magnet schools.[7]

Around 2011 the school installed Jesse Mazur as its principal. In 2012 various staff and others asked MPS officials to keep Mazur after Mazur revealed that MPS was listing the position of principal as being "vacant" for 2012.[8]

In 2012 Milwaukee alderman Tony Zielinski described the school as unsafe after a fight at Bay View resulted in 30 students being arrested.[9]

In 2014 the school had 900 students. That year Alan J. Borsuk of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reported that the staff at Bay View were making efforts to improve the school's performance. In 2014 fewer than 20 students from Humboldt Park School matriculated to Bay View, due to the efforts of SpringBoard, am Advanced Placement (AP) preparation program.[10]

Demographics

As of 2014 there were 900 students. 58% were Black, 30% were Hispanic or Latino, and 10% were White. 65% of all students lived within five miles of the school, and of all students 10% lived within two miles of the school.[10]

Academics

In 2009 the staff of the Discovery World museum created the course "The Art and Archaeology of Me" which allows students to document historical artifacts and historical information in Bay View historical sites.[6]

Notable alumni

Notes

Further reading

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