Dawson-Bryant High School

Dawson-Bryant High School is a public high school in Coal Grove, Ohio. It is the only high school in the Dawson-Bryant Local School District. Their mascot is the Hornets; and the school's colors are red, black, and white.

Dawson-Bryant High School
Address
1 Hornet Lane

, ,
45638

United States
Coordinates38°30′11″N 82°38′45″W
Information
TypePublic, Coeducational high school
School districtDawson-Bryant Local School District
SuperintendentSteve Easterling
PrincipalDean Mader
Faculty18 (FTE)[1]
Grades9-12
Enrollment283 (2017–18)[1]
Student to teacher ratio15.72[1]
Campusrural
Color(s)Red, Black and White [2]             
Fight songCoal Grove Victory March
Athletics conferenceOhio Valley Conference[2]
SportsFootball, Basketball, Baseball, Softball, Marching Band, Volleyball, Track and Field, Cross Country, Golf
MascotHornet
Team nameHornets[2]
RivalIronton Fighting Tigers Rock Hill Redmen Chesapeake Panthers
Athletic DirectorBryan Mulkey
Assistant SuperintendentEllen Adkins
Websitedb.k12.oh.us

Athletics

Dawson-Bryant High School is a founding member of the Ohio Valley Conference. Currently, the other members of the conference include Chesapeake High School (Panthers), Rock Hill Senior High School (Redmen), Proctorville Fairland High School (Dragons), South Point High School (Pointers), Ironton High School (Fighting Tigers), Portsmouth High School (Trojans) and Gallia Academy High School (Blue Devils)

Powerlifting

2006, 2007, 2009, and 2010 state champions

gollark: GPUs as good parallel processors, or a good way to market/fund parallel processors, that is.
gollark: Not really. I recall reading that Nvidia's founders explicitly thought of this.
gollark: And AI is being spun off onto dedicatedish hardware too now, it just happens that general-purpose GPUs were the best parallel processing things available for a while.
gollark: I think they have ASICs for that now?
gollark: Bitcoin is mined on ASICs, so no.

References

  1. "Dawson-Bryant High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  2. OHSAA. "Ohio High School Athletic Association member directory". Archived from the original on 2010-11-03. Retrieved 2010-04-02.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.