Lemont High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
800 Porter Street , 60439 United States | |
Coordinates | 41°40′27″N87°59′28″W / 41.6742°N 87.991°W |
Information | |
School type | Public Secondary |
Established | 1906 |
School district | Lemont HS 210 |
Superintendent | Dr. Mary Ticknor [1] |
CEEB code | 142590 [2] |
Principal | Mr. Eric Michaelsen [1] |
Teaching staff | 91.18 (FTE) [3] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Gender | coed |
Enrollment | 1,324 (2022-2023) [3] |
• Grade 9 | 295 students |
• Grade 10 | 338 students |
• Grade 11 | 333 students |
• Grade 12 | 358 students |
Average class size | 24 [4] |
Student to teacher ratio | 14.52 [3] |
Campus size | 30 acres (120,000 m2) [5] |
Campus type | Suburban |
Color(s) | Navy Blue Gold [6] |
Slogan | Let’s go Lemont |
Fight song | Lemont Loyalty |
Athletics conference | South Suburban [6] |
Team name | None [7] |
Newspaper | Tom-Tom [8] |
Website | http://www.lhs210.net/ |
Lemont High School, or LHS, is a public four-year high school located in Lemont, Illinois, a southwest suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. It is the only school of Lemont Township High School District 210, which serves the Village of Lemont and small portions of Woodridge and Downers Grove. LHS also serves as a feeder school for Deaf/Hard-of-hearing students in the area.
An old surviving document shows graduates in 1891, although Lemont High School was not officially formed until 1906, when five students (four girls and one boy) began meeting for class in the school building located at 410 McCarthy Road. The high school leased three rooms in the building at a rate of $500 per year. The original building is now used for condominiums, but the Central Elementary school is still connected to the East end of the building. [5]
By 1925, after many failed attempts, an 18,000-square-foot (1,700 m2) building was finally constructed at 800 Porter Street, where the school is located to this day. The original building cost $125,000 to build and included eight classrooms, a library, a science lab, a home economics room, and a gymnasium. [5]
Student enrollment almost doubled during the 1950s, which in turn led to three expansionary construction projects. Among the new additions were an 11,500-square-foot (1,070 m2) gymnasium (completed in 1950), and 38,000 square feet (3,500 m2) worth of classroom additions (completed by 1959). By the end of the decade, the school was equipped with wood, metal, industrial arts, and electrical shops. [5]
After occupying 6.5 acres (26,000 m2) since the late 1920s, Lemont High School expanded to 29 acres (120,000 m2) by 1967, with a significant portion of that land being used for athletic facilities. A $1.1 million project was completed in 1971, which added a new auditorium, kitchen, locker rooms, and more. On June 13, 1976, the school suffered nearly $500,000 in tornado damages. Shortly thereafter, the community passed a bond to rebuild. [5]
The student population at LHS began to climb in the 1990s, which resulted in yet another expansion in 1997. The $24.5 million project added a three-story classroom addition and a fieldhouse, essentially doubling the building’s square footage to 300,000. A unique parking facility was also built as part of the expansion to help ease severe parking problems for students and staff. [5]
Also in the late 1990s, filming took place at Lemont High School for the movie Save the Last Dance. The school was depicted as the main character's Midwestern high school. Portions of the front of the high school were shown during the beginning of the movie along with the main staircase inside the school. Other areas throughout the town were also shown in the movie. [5]
Lemont High School’s facilities expanded off campus in 2003 with the completion of the Lemont High School Athletic Complex, located at 131st Street and Bell Road. The 26-acre (110,000 m2) facility serves as home to the school’s baseball, soccer, and softball teams. [5]
With student enrollment continuing to grow each year, Lemont High School has undergone further expansion recently. In 2005, the community passed a $29.6 million referendum allowing the school to start an expansion which included a new and improved auditorium, approximately 30 new classrooms, a new wood shop, a turf football field with improved lighting and expanded audience seating, an expanded cafeteria area, additional parking, safety upgrades, and much more. Construction started in early 2006. The new addition of 30 classrooms as well as the football stadium enhancements were completed before the start of the 2007 school year. Construction on the new auditorium (now called the Performing Arts Center) was completed in March 2008. Other areas of the school, mainly parking lots and roads, were completed in the summer months of 2008.
The expansion included features that would benefit every Lemont High School student:
Currently, the 360,000-square-foot (33,000 m2) school covers 30 acres (120,000 m2) of land. It continues to stand where it was originally built in 1925. [5] The 2006 construction project, which lasted nearly two years, was named the K-12 Education "Project of the Year" in Midwest Construction magazine's "Best of 2008" competition [9]
Lemont High School follows the Block 8 system in which students take eight courses that meet every other day. A standard school day is composed of four 87-minute periods with an optional "zero-hour" available for students to take additional courses before the school day begins. [10]
Lemont High School's enrollment of nearly 1,400 students can choose from approximately 200 course offerings in nine departments. Students are assigned to course levels based on test scores, past achievement, and teacher recommendation. Honors and/or Advanced Placement courses are available in most curricular areas. Students also have access to classes at the Wilco Area Career Center in Romeoville, Illinois, a regional vocational center of which Lemont High School is a member. [10]
Lemont High School recently added Lemont Time. The addition has been added on their PLC days where students get a dedicated 30 minutes every Wednesday to talk about a variety of Lemont topics. Instead of leaving at their usual 2:37pm, student now leave school at 3pm. Though disliked heavily by the student body, Lemont time is there to stay. [10]
The school's class of 2016 earned an average composite ACT test score of 23.3. In addition, 93.9% of the graduating class of 2016 enrolled in post-high school continuing education. [10]
In 2017, Lemont High School was named a National Blue Ribbon School, having been selected as an Exemplary High Performing School. To earn such designation, Lemont High School placed among the top 15 percent of all schools in Illinois when ranked by student performance on the most recently administered English language arts and math state assessments, or by student performance on state assessments in combination with other student performance measures, such as attendance and/or graduation rates. [11]
The Academic Departments at Lemont High School are:
The Director of Activities & Athletics is John Young.
Lemont competes in the South Suburban Conference (SSC) and is a member of the Illinois High School Association (IHSA), which governs most sports and competitive activities in the state. Teams are named the Indians (see Naming controversy). School colors are Navy Blue and Gold.
The school sponsors interscholastic teams for young men and women in bowling, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis, track & field, and volleyball. [12] Young men may compete in baseball, football, and wrestling, while young women may compete in cheerleading, softball. [12] and poms.
The school's teams have finished in the top four of the following IHSA sponsored state championship tournaments or meets: [13]
Angel Cabral (Class of '10), recorded back-to-back state championships when he earned the 285-pound title at both the 2009 and 2010 Class 2A Individual Wrestling State Championships.
Matt Leibforth (Class of '10), became Lemont's first-ever undefeated state champion when he triumphed in the 135-pound weight class at the 2010 Class 2A Individual Wrestling State Championship. Leibforth finished with a 45-0 record.
A single-season school record three wrestlers won titles at the 2020 IHSA Class 2A Wrestling Individual State Finals: Drew Nash (126 IBS), Apollo Gothard (220 IBS) and Muhamad Jarad (285 IBS). Gothard finished the season 49-0 and set a school season record for victories.
Lemont High School's teams had been known as the Indians until the mid-1960s, when an athletic director christened the school with the name Injuns to distinguish it from the many others using Native American names as their team name. [16] However, many viewed the name Injuns as a racial slur. In the early 2000s, the Illinois Native American Bar Association notified the high school of its disapproval of the Injuns name. By August 2004, the District 210 board voted to choose a new mascot with community input. [17]
In February 2005, a school and community vote narrowly favored the name Titans over the Engines, a near homophone of the outgoing mascot name. [18] However, the Titans name was never officially adopted. Local elections later in 2005 brought in new school board members who fulfilled their promise to restore the school's original Indians mascot name. The school went without a nickname for the 2005-2006 school year, allowing time for a transition of logos and uniforms. Lemont officially returned to the Indians name beginning with the 2006-2007 school year. [16] The school board voted unanimously in July 2021 to phase out the Indians mascot. [7]
Extra-curricular opportunities are available to each student. In order to keep the system of verifying eligibility manageable, the Illinois High School Association guidelines for athletics are used as a basis for eligibility for all extra-curricular activities at Lemont High School. Extra-curricular activities at Lemont High School are placed into three classifications: Clubs, Competitive Extra-Curricular Activities, and Co-Curricular Activities.
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K-12 Education - Project of the Year: Lemont High School, Lemont, Ill.