Guy–Perkins High School

Guy–Perkins High School is a comprehensive six-year public high school in Guy, Arkansas, United States. It is one of four public high schools in Faulkner County and is the sole high school administered by Guy–Perkins School District serving grades 7 through 12. The school's varsity athletic teams have won 12 state championship titles, primarily in basketball.

Guy–Perkins High School
Address
492 AR 25 North

,
72061

United States
Coordinates35°19′32″N 92°19′23″W
Information
School typeComprehensive
School districtGuy–Perkins School District
NCES District ID0507140[1]
NCES School ID050714000434[2]
PrincipalKaren Hoskins
Teaching staff19.18 (on FTE basis)[2]
Grades7–12
Enrollment159[2] (2016–17[2])
Student to teacher ratio10.06[2]
Color(s)     Blue
     Gold
Athletics conference1A 5 North (2012–14)
MascotThunderbird
Team nameGuy–Perkins Thunderbirds
USNWR rankingUnranked
Websitehttp://www.gptbirds.org/

Extracurricular activities

The Guy–Perkins mascot and athletic emblem is the Thunderbird with blue and gold serving as its school colors.

Athletics

The Guy–Perkins Thunderbirds compete in the state's smallest classification—1A Classification administered by the Arkansas Activities Association. For 2012–14, the Thunderbirds compete in the 1A Region 5 North Conference. Guy–Perkins sponsor teams in volleyball, golf (boys/girls), basketball (boys/girls), baseball, softball, and track and field (boys/girls).[3]

gollark: There are lots of problems with all the models. I think at least trying to come up with and consider different ones is worth doing, though, because pretending IP is not-intellectual property is problematic.
gollark: I like reading (e)books myself.
gollark: Or to have people be paid per use of a thing out of a pool of input money, like Kindle Unlimited and whatever.
gollark: One idea for that is to have people pay upfront kickstarter-style, but that has its own problems too.
gollark: I don't really know how intellectual property issues "should" work, although I don't think the current approach of "just pretend they work like non-duplicable physical goods as much as possible" is a very good one.

References

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