Coconino High School

Coconino High School
Location

2801 North Izabel Street
Flagstaff, Arizona 86004

USA
Coordinates 35°12′57″N 111°37′24″W / 35.215892°N 111.623379°W / 35.215892; -111.623379Coordinates: 35°12′57″N 111°37′24″W / 35.215892°N 111.623379°W / 35.215892; -111.623379
Information
Type Public, Secondary
Motto Pride, Spirit, Unity, Diversity and Educational Excellence [1]
School district Flagstaff Unified School District
Principal Stacie Zanzucchi [1]
Faculty 93
Grades 912 [2]
Number of students 1,446 (October 1, 2012)[3]
Color(s) Black and Red [2]
Mascot Panthers [1]
Rival Flagstaff High School
Website

Coconino High School (CHS) is a public secondary school located in Flagstaff, Arizona (USA). It is part of the Flagstaff Unified School District and is one of the district's two high schools.

Located at 2801 North Izabel Street, Coconino High School serves students in grades nine through twelve and currently enrolls 1,446 students as of 2012.

The school's mascot is the panther.

History

The school first opened its doors in September 1967 to grades 10-12. The school's namesake is the name of the county in which it is located, Coconino County. Since its founding, the school building has been remodeled twice, once in 1977 and then again in 1989 (when FUSD added ninth graders to its high schools).

Neighborhoods served

Coconino High School serves east Flagstaff neighborhoods as well as a portion of the Navajo Nation. The school also serves the northern and eastern outlying suburbs and rural areas of Flagstaff, such as Doney Park and Winona.

Statistics

Ethnicity Percentage
White American/ Non-Hispanic 43%
Native American 23%
Native American/White or Alaskan Native/White 2%
Hispanic American with 2 or more races 11%
Hispanic ethnicity/ White 9%
Hispanic ethnicity/American Indian or Alaskan Native 7%
American Indian or Alaskan Native/Black <5%
Native American or Alaskan Native with 2 or more races <5%
Black <5%
Black/White <5%
Hispanic ethnicity/Black <5%
Asian <5%
Asian/White <5%
Asian/Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander <5%
Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander <5%

[4]

Coconino High School has a student to teacher ratio of 31.2 to 1. Eighty-two percent of the school's faculty has ten or more years of teaching experience.

Extracurricular activities

Athletics

Coconino High School also has a host of athletic teams such as (Men's) Football, (Men's and Women's) Basketball, (Men's and Women's) Soccer, (Women's) Volleyball, (Men's) Baseball, (Women's) Softball, (Men's and Women's) Tennis, (Men's and Women's) Cross Country/ Track and Field, Men's Wrestling, and (Men's) Golf.[5] Coconino High School and Flagstaff High School have had a rivalry since the school opened. The two schools play each other in football at the City Championship game (located at Northern Arizona University's Walkup Skydome), which is the last game of the regular season for both schools.

Clubs

Coconino High School maintains a variety of clubs for students to participate in. Activities offered include the Coconino High School Student Council, SkillsUSA, Drama Club, Asian Cultural Club, the Coconino High School chapter of the National Honor Society, and the Native American Club. Coconino High School is also home to the "CocoNuts" FIRST Robotics Team, the first and only program of its kind in northern Arizona. They have garnered acclaim by qualifying for the FIRST Robotics World Championship Competition every year since their establishment in the 2007-08 school year. The school hosts an Army Junior ROTC battalion, which it picked up from the closed Sinagua High School.

Performing arts

CHS has many performing arts programs: Marching Band (during the football season)/ Symphonic Band (after football season), two-tiered Choir, Orchestra, and Drama Club with accompanying Theatre class.

Band

The Coconino High School Band (both marching and concert) are award winning; consistently receiving ratings: Superior to Superior with Distinction at marching band and symphonic band competitions over Arizona, Nevada, and California.[6] In addition, many band members audition for the Northwest Region AMEA Honor Band, of which a majority are accepted. Of those, several students audition for the Arizona Music Educators Association All-State Honor Band.

Coconino Institute of Technology

The Coconino Institute of Technology (CIT) is a four-year-long accelerated science and technology program (sometimes accredited as a magnet school) within Coconino High School.[7]

Students who enter the CIT program commit to attaining the following goals by graduation: achieving an ACT score of at least 29 or an SAT score of at least 1300 (Critical reading and mathematics sections), engaging in four years of career exploration through partnerships with current industry professionals and institutions of higher learning, completing at least five college or university applications, completing at least one scholarship application, and gaining acceptance into a college or university. The CIT curriculum allows students to complete all three major sciences required for Arizona public university admission at an pre-AP (honors) level within two years (Physics, Biology, and Chemistry). CIT students also complete an in-depth semester long project their senior fall semester on a topic of their choice.[8]

Though CIT is a four-year program, students may choose to not continue. When a student does make this decision, they may not re-enter into the program.

Acceptance into CIT

Before entering high school, prospective students must apply; acceptance into CIT is based upon an entrance assessment (math), middle school GPA, teacher recommendations, and a writing sample completed at the time of testing.[9] The entrance test is conducted every year in mid-April, however only incoming Freshmen may apply.

Current CIT three-year schedule

The CIT schedule is continuously evolving. This is the current four-year schedule for 2015 graduates.[8]

Freshman year

Sophomore year

Junior year

Other

Coconino High School is also home to the 1999 National Science Teacher of the Year, David Thompson, who taught physics at Coconino High School while being a master teacher at the Center for Science Teaching and Learning (CTSL) at Northern Arizona University.[10][11]

References

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