New Albany High School (Ohio)

New Albany High School is a public high school located in New Albany, Ohio, part of the New Albany-Plain Local School District. New Albany is a four-year comprehensive high school accredited by the Ohio Department of Education. It has been nationally recognized as a School of Excellence. Due to population expansion, the school was expanded in 1996.

New Albany High School
Address
7600 Fodor Road

,
43054

United States
Coordinates40°5′10″N 82°48′58″W
Information
TypePublic school
Opened1996
School districtNew Albany-Plain Local School District
SuperintendentMichael Sawyers[1]
Teaching staff97.10 (on a FTE basis)[2]
Grades9-12
Enrollment1,613[2] (2018-2019)
Student to teacher ratio16.61[2]
Color(s)Maroon and Gold [1]         
Athletics conferenceOhio Capital Conference[1]
NicknameEagles[1]
NewspaperThe Talon
Websitewww.napls.us/Domain/11

History

In the 1820s in Plain Township, schooling had been taught in log cabins. In 1821, a frame school building was built on Central College; the teacher was Jacob Smith. In 1874, a new brick school was built in the Village.

In 1955 the Ohio General Assembly eliminated the requirement that cities and school districts have common borders.[3] From the 50s through the 70s the City of Columbus aggressively annexed land, causing concern for local school districts. In 1980 the suburban school districts together persuaded the Ohio General Assembly to place a two-year moratorium on all big-city school district transfers. Concerned legislators asked school officials to work out a solution to the growing "turf war" over the changing school district boundaries. In 1982, when little progress was made toward arriving at an agreeable solution, the General Assembly extended the moratorium for another two years, but stated they would not renew it again in 1986. Once again, the districts were directed to develop permanent boundary and annexation agreements. State Representative Michael Stinziano (Columbus) and other community and education leaders convened a series of negotiations with the Franklin County school district officials in 1986. These officials eventually reached an agreement, the “Joint Agreement Among and Between the Boards of Education of Certain School Districts in Franklin County, Ohio”, nicknamed “Win-Win”. The agreement established mechanisms to predict school district boundaries among the twelve member districts. It set procedures for Columbus to acquire new territory in the future, and established revenue sharing between Columbus City Schools and the suburban districts. The success of the agreement's adoption resulted in the Ohio General Assembly’s approval, and Governor Celeste’s signing of the agreement.

The current New Albany High School was built in 1996. The school was expanded in 2002 to include an additional academic wing with offices, a new high school football stadium and additional locker rooms. Those improvements were completed in 2004. [4]

Facilities

The New Albany Plain Local School District operates the following facilities:

  • New Albany Early Learning Center (Formally New Albany K-1)
  • New Albany Primary School (Formerly New Albany 2-5)
  • New Albany Intermediate School (Formerly New Albany 1-8)
  • New Albany High School
  • Jeanne B. McCoy Community Center for the Arts

Part of New Albany's building project in 1996 was the completion of a natatorium. This facility is open to the community, as well as the students. It also hosts home meets for the New Albany Swimming and Diving team.[5]

Built in 2008, The McCoy Center for the Arts is a multi-use art center with 35,000 square feet (3,300 m2) and includes a 786-seat auditorium with balcony seating, partial fly loft, a large lobby, rehearsal studio, dance studio, scene shop and art classrooms. The McCoy Company and New Albany-Plain Local School District both share the building.[6]

In 2013, an artificial turf football field was built inside the old football stadium. The football stadium was renamed "Veterans Field" in honor of all the alumni who served in the armed forces. The football field was an addition that was completely funded by donations from the public. [7]

In 2019, the city of New Albany opened "Rose Run Park", complete with a bridge connecting the campus to the New Albany library and market street stores, bike trails, and more.

In 2019, the New Albany Plain Local Schools district leased land to the City of New Albany, to begin construction on an amphitheater between New Albany Middle School, and the Jeanne B. McCoy Center for the Arts.

Athletics

Teams

  • Fall: Cheerleading, Cross Country, Football, Golf, Soccer, Tennis Volleyball, Field Hockey
  • Winter: Cheerleading, Basketball, Hockey, Swimming & Diving, Wrestling, Bowling
  • Spring: Baseball, Lacrosse, Softball, Tennis, Track and Field

Ohio High School Athletic Association Team State Championships

Notable alumni

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gollark: And one of my parents has (they're replacing it now, though) a ~10-year-old laptop which ran glacially slowly.
gollark: I used it for several years when I was a foolish younger person.
gollark: Plus updates are annoying. I can update *mostly* without reboots (they take 25 seconds anyway) and in the background.
gollark: And it'll still randomly waste resources for no reason.

References

  1. OHSAA. "Ohio High School Athletic Association member directory". Archived from the original on 2010-11-04. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
  2. "New Albany High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-09-08. Retrieved 2010-03-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2020-04-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "New-Albany High School Pool". Archived from the original on 2008-01-19. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  6. "The McCoy Center for the Arts>Venue Design". Archived from the original on 2009-05-21. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  7. "New Albany's stadium getting field turf".
  8. "Hall of Fame". Archived from the original on 2009-02-01. Retrieved 2009-01-29.
  9. "The life Rifqa Bary ran away from". Archived from the original on 2009-10-13. Retrieved 2017-02-19.


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