Morrilton High School

Morrilton High School is a comprehensive public high school serving students in grades nine through twelve in Morrilton, Arkansas, United States. It is in Conway County and is the sole high school administered by the South Conway County School District.

Morrilton High School
Address
701 East Harding Street

,
72110

United States
Coordinates35°9′53″N 92°44′5″W
Information
StatusOpen
School districtSouth Conway County School District
NCES District ID0512520[1]
AuthorityArkansas Department of Education (ADE)
CEEB code041710
NCES School ID051252001242[2]
Grades9–12
Enrollment701 (2016-17)[3]
Student to teacher ratio11.31[2]
Education systemADE Smart Core curriculum
School color(s)     Maroon
     Gray
Athletics conference5A West (2012–14)
MascotDevil Dog
Team nameMorrilton Devil Dogs[4]
AccreditationADE
USNWR rankingUnranked
Feeder schoolsMorrilton Junior High School
AffiliationArkansas Activities Association[4]
Websitewww.sccsd.org/mhs/

Academics

The assumed course of study follows the Smart Core curriculum developed the Arkansas Department of Education (ADE), which requires students to complete 22 credit units before graduation. Students engage in regular and career focus courses and exams and may select Advanced Placement (AP) coursework and exams that provide an opportunity to receive college credit. According to the student handbook, exceptional students may be awarded an honors diploma based on participation in 12 of the 26 offered AP courses and grade point averages (GPA) resulting in three awards: Honors diploma (GPA 3.0 after 8 semesters), Honors Graduate status (GPA 3.5 after 8 semesters) or Highest Honors Graduate status (GPA 4.0 after 8 semesters).

Twenty-six AP, pre-AP or honor courses are offered to include:

* Pre AP English 9* AP Calculus AB
* Pre AP English 10* Honors Desktop Publishing I and II
* AP English Language* Honors CADD: Architecture II
* AP English/Literature & Composition* Honors CADD: Engineering II
* Honors Civics and Government* Pre AP US History
* AP United States History* Pre AP Biology
* Pre AP World History* AP Biology
* AP World History* Pre AP Chemistry I
* Honors Algebra II* AP Chemistry I
* Honors Algebra III* Physics
* EAST Initiative* Honors Physical Science
* Multimedia Application I and II* Spanish II
* Pre AP Calculus* Spanish IIII

Morrilton was listed as Unranked in the Best High Schools 2012 report by U.S. News & World Report.[5]

Extracurricular activities

The Morrilton High School mascot is the Devil Dog with school colors of maroon and gray. The Morrilton Devil Dogs participate in various interscholastic activities in the 5A West Conference administered by the Arkansas Activities Association. The school athletic activities include baseball, basketball (boys/girls), competitive cheer, cross country (boys/girls), American football, golf (boys/girls), softball, tennis (boys/girls), and volleyball. The boys basketball team won state championships in 1973 and 1991 while the girls won state championships in 2003 and 2006. The Devil Dogs won state football championships in 1971, 1973 and 2013. Coached by Doyne Davis, the '71 team won the Class AA state championship with a perfect 13-0 record, defeating HS Lakeside 38-6, Magnolia 27-8 and Stuttgart 10-7 in the AA playoffs. RB James McDaniel and OT Kenny Koontz were named All-State and selected to play in the 1972 AHSCA All-Star game where McDaniel was game MVP. Coach Davis is Morrilton's all-time winningest coach with a 108-47-1 career mark.[4]

Beyond athletic activities, students participate in a full range of clubs and organizations including Band, Choir, Theatre (Thespian Troupe 3131), Student Council, National Beta Club, Future Business Leaders of America, Future Farmers of America, Mu Alpha Theta (math honor society), Student Reporters, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, and Health Occupations Students of America.

Notable alumni

The following are notable people associated with Morrilton High School. If the person was a Morrilton High School student, the number in parentheses indicates the year of graduation; if the person was a faculty or staff member, that person's title and years of association are included:

  • Nathan Green Gordon (1930–31, Grade 9–10)—Politician, lawyer, and Medal of Honor-decorated naval aviator.
  • Maurice Jeffers (1997)—Professional basketball player.
  • Jimmy Oliver (1987)—Professional basketball player (1991–2007).
  • Shekinna Stricklen (2008)—WNBA professional basketball player; 2-time Arkansas Gatorade Player of the Year.
  • C. Vann Woodward (1926)—American historian; Pulitizer Prize and Jefferson Lecture series honoree.
  • Jacolby Criswell (2020) - Division 1 college QB @UNC
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gollark: Alternatively, if your application is so glacially slow that your server can only manage 1 request a second or something, you probably won't just buy 100 servers.

References

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