Roosevelt High School (Seattle)

Roosevelt High School

South entrance in February 2008
"What I am to be I am now becoming"
Address
1410 NE 66th Street
Seattle, Washington 98115
United States
Coordinates 47°40′37″N 122°18′47″W / 47.677°N 122.313°W / 47.677; -122.313Coordinates: 47°40′37″N 122°18′47″W / 47.677°N 122.313°W / 47.677; -122.313
Information
Type Public
Established 1922, 94 years ago
Principal Brian Vance
Faculty 116
Grades 912
Enrollment 1,814
Color(s) Green & Gold            
Athletics WIAA Class 3A,
Washington Interscholastic Activities Association
Athletics conference Metro 3A,
Sound Division
Mascot Rough Riders
Rivals Ballard, Garfield
Newspaper The Roosevelt News
Yearbook Strenuous Life
Information (206) 252-4810
Website Roosevelt High School

Roosevelt High School (RHS) is a public secondary school located in the Roosevelt neighborhood of in Seattle, Washington. Opened 94 years ago in 1922 and part of the Seattle Public Schools, Roosevelt continues to be one of the largest schools in the greater Seattle area.

The school offers a wide variety of academic courses as well as extracurricular activities. In a yearlong series of reports on RHS, NPR described it as "an above-average school in a below-average school district."[1]

Name

The school is named after President Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919); the school's team, the Rough Riders, is named after Roosevelt's famous military regiment. It subsequently gave its name to the Roosevelt neighborhood and nearby Roosevelt Way N.E.[2]

Facilities

The school was designed by the Seattle School District's architect, Floyd Naramore, and constructed in 1921–22. From 2004 to 2006, the building was seismically retrofitted, modernized, and expanded while many of the school's original architectural elements were preserved. During this time classes were held in Lincoln High School. Architects for this work were Bassetti Architects.

Programs, groups, and clubs

Roosevelt High School has the only full-time drama program in the Seattle School District. Eight periods of drama are offered per day including directing, acting, technical theater, production, design, and a complete musical theater program. There are four private voice teachers, a vocal director, and a choreographer for the annual musical.

Roosevelt High School remains one of the last two public schools in the Seattle Metropolitan area that offers Latin. The Latin language club is affiliated with the National Junior Classical League, and remains one of the largest local chapters.

In the Hands for a Bridge program, members choose to travel to either South Africa or Northern Ireland, where they help foster dialogue about diversity, prejudice, and social change. This group was created in 2001 by teachers Tom Nolet, Francene Watson, and Danny Rock with assistance from the University of Washington's Comparative History of Ideas program and the Jackson School of International Studies. Each student accepted to this program is enrolled in the HFB class, where an intensive year-long study of literature, history, and the arts focuses on cultures in conflict.[3] The Northern Ireland travelers visit Oakgrove Integrated College in Derry which is led by John Harkin, while the South African travelers visit Isilimela Comprehensive School and Bellville High School (Hoërskool Bellville) in Cape Town.[4]

In 2006, students and their teachers designed a robot to fly in a weightless environment. When a sensor on the spherical robot perceives a beam of infrared light, it stops its rotation and, with the force caused by a set of motors spinning heavy flywheels, rotates the "front" to face the source of light.

Roosevelt High School was home of the first successful program in Seattle oriented around students with Asperger's syndrome, a form of high functioning autism.

Music

Marching band

The marching band performs halftime shows at all home football games, basketball games, and occasionally volleyball games. Known as "The Pride of Seattle," this group of students also travels to and performs in multiple parades in the Northwest each year.[5]

Orchestras

The Roosevelt Orchestra program includes the Concert Orchestra, the Chamber Orchestra, and the Symphony Orchestra. The orchestras perform annually at various concerts and competitions, including the annual Northwest Orchestra Festival in Gresham, Oregon. In the 2013 festival, three groups out of the five (including a quintet and a sinfonia group) took first place in their divisions.

Jazz band

The Roosevelt Jazz Band performs and competes all over the nation and has traveled internationally. The band has been a finalist many times in the Essentially Ellington Competition in New York, receiving Honorable Mention in 2010 and winning third place in 2000, second place in 2001, 2005, 2009, 2011, and 2012, and first place in 2002, 2007 and 2008.[6] Besides its renowned jazz band, there is an excellent vocal jazz group, as well as two after-school jazz bands: Jazz Bands II and III. Jazz Band III was introduced at the beginning of the 2006–07 school year because of an increased number of jazz musicians arriving at Roosevelt.

Concert bands

Besides the jazz bands and orchestras, student musicians have the option to be in one of two concert bands. One band is called the Cadet Band, and consists predominantly of freshmen. The second concert band is the award-winning Symphonic Band, which competes in several local competitions.

Drama

Roosevelt High School is well known for its drama program.[7] Each year they have a "Dramafest", a series of twelve student-produced plays, a Winter Production, and a Spring Musical.

Sports

Roosevelt athletics has traditionally participated in the Metro League from its opening until the 1997–98 school year when Roosevelt, Garfield and Franklin High Schools moved to the Kingco 4A conference. Ballard High School moved to Kingco 4A in 2000. In 2014–15, Roosevelt, Garfield and Ballard High schools moved back to the Metro 3A Conference.[8]

Girls' Basketball

The girl's basketball team has won one state championship[9] and had a wide-release theatrical movie, The Heart of the Game based on their experiences.[10]

Boys' Basketball

The boy's basketball team has won three state championships; in 1946, 1973 & 1982 and placed 2nd in 1965 & 1987.[11] The most recent state playoffs appearance occurred in 2009.

Boys' Football

The Rough Rider football team lays claim to one state championship as crowned by the Associated Press in 1950.[12] Since the start of the official state playoffs in 1974, Roosevelt has made it to the state playoffs five times, most recently advancing to the quarterfinals in 2012, and Round of 16 in 2014.[13]

Girls' Soccer

The girls soccer team has been to the state playoffs eleven times, placing 3rd in 1990, and 2nd in 2000.[13] Notable players include Meghan Miller, who at Kansas was named 2004 NSCAA Second Team All American,[14][15] and Wynne Mcintosh, 1993 Metro League MVP and Portland Pilot.[16]

Ultimate Frisbee

The Roosevelt Ultimate team burst onto the national stage with impressive wins over Summit, Monarch, and Northwest to win the 2015 Westerns High School Ultimate tournament.[17] They followed up with a 2nd-place finish at the 2015 Seattle Invite tournament once again defeating Northwest, but losing to Franklin in the finals.

Languages

Roosevelt offers Latin, Spanish, Japanese, and French, and it is the only school in the city that offers American Sign Language.

Newspaper

The Roosevelt News is a National Pacemaker Award-winning paper[18] produced monthly by students and overseen by a staff advisor.

Demographics

As of May 2013 the student demographics were:[19]

64.9% - White
14.9% - Asian
6.7% - Black/African American
8.6% - Hispanic/Latino
0.9% - American Indian/Alaska Native
4.0% - Two or more races

Notable alumni

Alumni of Roosevelt High School include:

References

External links

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