Liberty High School (Hillsboro, Oregon)

Liberty High School
Address
21945 NW Wagon Way
Hillsboro, Oregon 97124
United States
Coordinates 45°33′45″N 122°54′09″W / 45.56250°N 122.90250°W / 45.56250; -122.90250Coordinates: 45°33′45″N 122°54′09″W / 45.56250°N 122.90250°W / 45.56250; -122.90250
Information
School type Public, high school
Founded 2003
School district Hillsboro School District 1J
Principal Greg Timmons[1]
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 1300 (2006-2007)
Language English
Campus Suburban, closed-campus
Color(s) Navy blue, Columbia blue, and white
Mascot Talon, a falcon
Team name Liberty Falcons
Website www.hsd.k12.or.us/liberty/

Liberty High School is located in Hillsboro, Oregon, United States, just west of Portland. It opened in 2003, with only freshmen, sophomores and juniors. The school has approximately 1600 students and 140 faculty members. As of 2016, the graduation rate was 85%.[2]

Construction

The school was designed by Mahlum Architects and features a rotunda two and a half stories tall at the main entrance.[3] Robinson Construction served as general contractor on the $49.3 million campus.[3] Amenities at the 292,000-square-foot (27,100 m2) school include a 536-seat theater and a 3,500 seat gym.[3]

Details

The school was previously organized by a "Small Schools Initiative" that divided the student body into four different "sub"-schools (academies). These are the Academy of Arts and Design, the Health and Human Services Academy, the Media, Culinary and Marketing Academy, and the Science, Engineering and Technology Academy. As of 2007, the student body was reorganized into three academies: the Freshman Academy, the Arts, Communication and Technology Academy, and the Health and Human Services Academy. The newly proposed Freshman Academy was introduced to compensate for the high amount of failing grades that previous freshmen were receiving. Once the freshmen have moved on to their sophomore year, they must then decide which of the other two academies they will join. In these academies the students work in various Focus Programs of study similar to college majors. The focus programs include Instrumental Music, Vocal Music, Visual Arts, Theatre Performance, Theatre Production, Child Services, Health Services, Public Services, Culinary Arts, Marketing/Management, Media Communications, Engineering, Science, and Technology.

Liberty has a student-run television studio referred to as "LTV." The students put on a morning broadcast every day, which informs viewers of activities, awards, and announcements, and includes video clips of sporting events. The Patrick Henry is the school's newspaper.

In 2006 and 2007, the Liberty Culinary team won silver medals at the National Culinary Arts Event.[4] They competed there after winning gold medals at state in the spring.[4] In both 2008 and 2009 they won the bronze medal at the national event.[4][5]

Academics

Front of the school

In 2015, 82% of the school's seniors received a high school diploma. Of 389 students, 43 dropped out.[6] The percentage of students who meet or exceed statewide standards for English is 58% (state average is 69%); for 32% for math (state average is 33%); and 69% for science (state average is 59%). 19% of the school are English Language Learners.[6]

Athletics

Liberty is a member of the Metro League, a 6A division of the Oregon School Activities Association. Home football games are played at Falcon Stadium. Liberty's nickname is the Falcons, with navy blue, Columbia blue, and gold as the school colors.[7]

References

  1. "Liberty High School School Directory 2014-Present". Hillsboro School District 1J.
  2. "Hillsboro School District Graduation Rates Rise, Despite Official Results". Hillsboro School District. January 26, 2017. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  3. 1 2 3 New Liberty High School Opens Doors in Hillsboro. Northwest Construction, January 01, 2004.
  4. 1 2 3 "Liberty's Culinary Arts students bring bronze medals home". The Hillsboro Argus. September 19, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-02.
  5. Owen, Wendy (August 27, 2009). "Liberty High chefs win third at national meet". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
  6. 1 2 "Your Schools: Liberty High School". The Oregonian. 2015. Retrieved 2017-01-04.
  7. Schools: La Grande-Myrtle Point. Oregon School Activities Association. Retrieved December 16, 2007.
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