William E. Tolman High School

Tolman High School
Address
150 Exchange St
Pawtucket, Rhode Island 02860
 United States
Coordinates 41°31′30″N 71°13′30″W / 41.52500°N 71.22500°W / 41.52500; -71.22500Coordinates: 41°31′30″N 71°13′30″W / 41.52500°N 71.22500°W / 41.52500; -71.22500
Information
School type Public high school
Established 1926[1][2][3]
School district Pawtucket School District
Superintendent Patti DiCenso
Principal Mr. Christopher Savastano
Faculty approx. 110[2]
Teaching staff 96[1]-109[4]
Grades 912
Enrollment 1,034 [5]
Campus Urban
Color(s) White, Red, and Black[1]             
Mascot Tigers
Average SAT scores 1328 (2009)[6]
Feeder schools Jenks Jr. High School, Goff Jr. High School
Website Tolman High Website

William E. Tolman Senior High School (originally Pawtucket Senior High School, changed to Pawtucket East High School, then William E. Tolman Senior High School[3]) is one of three public high schools located in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, United States.[1] It was built and opened in 1926 (Monahan & Meikle, architects[7]) along the east bank of the Blackstone River as a "state of the art" educational facility.[1][2] The building consists of four floors and a basement, 60 class rooms, a 1,300-seat auditorium, a swimming pool, and a nursery for the children of teenage mothers.[1][2][3][8] Tolman High School is the first multimillion-dollar high school east of the Mississippi and the gym is the oldest high school gym in Rhode Island that is still in use.[1][3] The school has been remodeled several time with the most recent being in 1980.[2]

The school's pool was also featured in the film Mermaids[9] and the school is in some scenes of the film Moonstruck.[1]

Thanksgiving football rivalries

Tolman High School shared a 73-year-old Thanksgiving Day football rivalry with nearby private school, Saint Raphael Academy.[1][10] Throughout the 90's, however, due to the trend in lopsided games resulting from a more powerful private school, it was decided in 2001 that Tolman's new rival would be Shea High School, the city's second public high school across the Blackstone River.[1][11] Saint Raphael's had been leading the series 38-34-4 before it was dissolved and had won the final 8 meetings by a combined score of 270-6.[10]

In the summer of 2010, due to realignment by the Rhode Island Interscholastic League and request by Saint Raphael Academy, Saint Ray's dropped from Division I to Division II B, the same division as Tolman. On September 17, 2010, for the first time since 2001, Tolman revived it's rivalry with Saint Ray's. Tolman won the contest with a score of 37-0.

In the days of the old rivalry on Thanksgiving Eve, Tolman students would participate in the annual Burning of the Casket ceremony on the Blackstone River. This ceremony would take place after the Homecoming dance and involved the release of a burning casket down the Blackstone River. The tradition of the burning of the casket however, was abandoned in the early 2000s.[1] The traditional pep rally held prior to the game was canceled in 2009[12] but returned the following year.

Dropout rate

With only 54% of freshman making it to their senior year, a study released by Johns Hopkins University for the Associated Press in 2007 called Tolman High School one of the nation's 'dropout factories' among high schools.[13] However, students who dropout but go on to receive their GED, transfer students, and students who were held back one or more grades are counted as dropouts.[8][13] Local officials said that many students from low-income families move between urban districts frequently and some travel back to their home country often adding to the dropout count twice.[8][13] State statistics however match the findings that fewer than 60 percent of students were retained until senior year.[13] According to the Rhode Island Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, the graduation rate for Tolman in 2008 was 58.4% with 24.3% dropping out compared to the state graduatin rate of 73.9% with 14.9% dropping out.[14]

Security issues

Security at Tolman High School was greatly scrutinized in the fall of 1996 when a Providence teenager blindly fired a .45 caliber semiautomatic pistol in the school cafeteria following a fistfight at a school dance.[15] A ban on outsiders at school dances and an increase is police officer presence at the school was enforced by the superintendent following the shooting.[15] A proposal for a requirement for all students to wear photo ids during regular school hours was another major policy brought forth shortly after the event. Student ids were issued for a number of years, but were discontinued due to funding issues. Weeks after the shooting, the suspect was arrested at a Dunkin' Donuts in Johnston, Rhode Island, after a detective learned he was in the doughnut shop and preparing to flee the state.[16]

In March 2001 a student allegedly threatened a teacher saying that he had a .22 pistol at home with bullet with the teachers name on it.[17]

On December 10, 2002, a student was jumped outside of the school by a group of students he accidentally bumped into in the hallway in which the student received 65 stitches and suffered numbness and scarring.[18][19][20] The attackers were identified using a school yearbook and four students were charged with assault and expelled for the rest of the school year.[18] The student's father said that there were other outbreaks of violence in the Pawtucket school system and alleged that school administrators were keeping them quiet.[18] He also demanded that police officers be posted inside Pawtucket school buildings.[18] School Committee members voted unanimously to commission the Blue Ribbon Violence Committee, headed by former Attorney General Sheldon Whitehouse, in response to the outrage.[19] In legal papers, the student said that the assault "took place as a result of the city's failure to provide adequate supervision and security" in the public schools and demanded $100,000, the statutory limit for damages in a municipal liability case.[20]

In May 2003 a student was suspended for carrying a weapon similar to brass knuckles in school.[21]

In September 2003 a task force on school violence said that school violence is going unchecked because students who are most likely to commit acts of violence are students prone to academic failure, and the Pawtucket school system has few programs to help those students.[22]

On January 12, 2005 nine young men were arrested for fighting outside of Tolman. Police were forewarned about the fight but it took 10 police officers to break up the fights because every time they would move the group a fight would break out around the corner. Two of the people arrested weren't residents of Pawtucket.[23]

In the spring of 2007, a suspicious looking object resembling a pipe bomb caused the evacuation of Tolman High School. The state's fire marshal's bomb squad was called in after a teacher spotted the object in a second floor locker. The bomb squad applied a small explosive charge to destroy the object. When a second larger explosion did not occur, the fragments were sent away for testing to learn more about the object. It was concluded that it was in fact part of the school's circa 1927 pipe organ that was decommissioned during renovation of the school's auditorium. Two students later confessed they stuck the piece of organ into a locker for safekeeping.[24]

Demographics

The numbers below are from the Rhode Island Department of Elementary and Secondary Education for the 2011-2012 school year.[25]

Ethnicity Number of Students Percentage
White 489 42%
Hispanic 388 34%
Black 191 17%
Asian Pacific 13 1%
American Indian 6 <1%
Two or More races 71 6% Total 1158 100%

Notable alumni

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "The History of William E. Tolman High School...". psdri.net.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "William E. Tolman Senior High School - The SALT Visit School Report" (PDF). eride.ri.gov. October 21, 2005.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Two-handed set shots may be gone, but the old courts remain". projo.com. January 18, 2007.
  4. "William E. Tolman High School - Pawtucket, Rhode Island/RI - Public School Profile". publicschoolreview.com.
  5. "SAT Scorse of RI Public High School Seniors By School: Class of 2009" (PDF). ride.ri.gov.
  6. Engineering News-Record Nov. 1925: 158.
  7. 1 2 3 "Dropout tales of hardship, hope". Projo.com. June 10, 2008.
  8. "PEOPLE Bette Davis cut daughters out of her will". Projo.com. November 7, 1989.
  9. 1 2 "St. Raphael vs. Tolman". rihssports.com.
  10. "Shea vs. Tolman". rihssports.com.
  11. "Frivolity blends with tradition at Tolman’s graduation". PawtucketTimes.com. June 20, 2009.
  12. 1 2 3 4 "Study: 5 R.I. schools ‘dropout factories’". Projo.com. November 2, 2007.
  13. "Graduation Rates - Rhode Island High Schools" (PDF). ride.ri.gov.
  14. 1 2 Journal-Bulletin, JOHN CASTELLUCCI (Oct 30, 1996). "Security policies under review after gun is fired at Tolman dance *Police continue to look for a Providence youth who allegedly fired a .45-caliber pistol Friday". Projo.com.
  15. "Police arrest last suspect in school dance shooting". Projo.com. Nov 4, 1996.
  16. "Student, 15, charged in threat". Projo.com. March 14, 2001.
  17. 1 2 3 4 "Four teens suspended for assault". Projo.com. January 16, 2003.
  18. 1 2 Journal, JOHN CASTELLUCCI (May 20, 2003). "Panel told police crackdown needed in schools". Projo.com.
  19. 1 2 Journal, JOHN CASTELLUCCI (July 25, 2003). "Assault victim claims damages". Projo.com.
  20. "Police Briefs - Toy gun, brass knuckles lead to student suspensions". Projo.com. May 15, 2003.
  21. Journal, JOHN CASTELLUCCI (September 24, 2003). "Programs sought to stem school violence". Projo.com.
  22. "Today in history: Honest inmate leaves prison early". Projo.com. January 12, 2010.
  23. "Pipe organ at center of school bomb scare". Projo.com. May 26, 2007.
  24. "Reports". eride.ri.gov.
  25. "Kilmartin enters race for Rhode Island attorney general". Providence Journal 24 February 2010. Retrieved 23 August 2010.
  26. "Kevin Lima: From Tolman to Hollywood". my.hsj.org. December 22, 2008.
  27. Morgan, Thomas J. "A lifetime of design capped by Bananagrams", The Providence Journal, June 9, 2010. Accessed June 12, 2010.

External links

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