Owasso High School | |
---|---|
Address | |
12901 East 86th Street North , Oklahoma 74055 United States | |
Coordinates | 36°16′47″N95°49′42″W / 36.27972°N 95.82833°W |
Information | |
Established | September, 1975 |
School district | Owasso Public Schools |
NCES District ID | 4023280 [1] |
Superintendent | Margaret Coates [2] |
Principal | Tiffani Cooper [3] |
Teaching staff | 139.13 (FTE) (2022–23) [4] |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 2,986 (2022–23) [4] |
Student to teacher ratio | 21.46 (2022–23) [4] |
Campuses | East Campus, West Campus [5] |
Color(s) | Red, black, and white |
Song | Owasso Alma Mater [6] |
Fight song | Owasso Fight Song [7] |
Athletics conference | 6A District 1 |
Sports | Baseball, Basketball (Boys), Basketball (Girls), Cheer, Cross Country, Football, Golf (Boys), Golf (Girls), Pom, Soccer (Boys), Soccer (Girls), Softball, Swimming (Boys & Girls), Tennis (Boys), Tennis (Girls), Track and Field, Volleyball, Wrestling [8] |
Mascot | Rambo |
Nickname | Rams |
Rival | |
Newspaper | Owasso RamPage [9] |
Website | ohs |
Last updated: August 8, 2022 |
Owasso High School is a high school located within Tulsa County in Owasso, Oklahoma, United States. It is among the largest high schools in Oklahoma by enrollment with nearly 3,000 students. In 2024, the school received international attention following the death of Nex Benedict. [10] [11]
The district (of which this is the sole comprehensive high school) includes Owasso, a small portion of Tulsa, [12] Limestone, and a small portion of Valley Park. [13] It is located within the 7,000 square-mile Cherokee Nation reservation in northeastern Oklahoma. [14]
In October 1998, Kristja Falvo filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma, alleging that the use of "peer-grading" within Owasso Public Schools violated the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). FERPA authorizes the withholding of federal funds from public school districts that "release any information from a student's education record" without permission from a "parent or eligible student." [15] The district court ruled in favor of the school district, prompting Falvo to file an appeal with the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. The appellate court then overturned the decision of the district court, arguing that "the District Court erred when it resolved that the grading practice did not offend FERPA." [16] The school district then appealed to the Supreme Court, with the case being argued in late November 2001.
The Supreme Court ruled unanimously in favor of Owasso Public Schools, citing that peer-graded papers do not constitute records "maintained by an educational agency or institution or by a person acting for such agency or institution." [17] Justice Anthony Kennedy delivered the Court's opinion, stating:
"Petitioners, supported by the United States as amicus curiae, contend the definition covers only institutional records—namely, those materials retained in a permanent file as a matter of course. They argue that records "maintained by an educational agency or institution" generally would include final course grades, student grade point averages, standardized test scores, attendance records, counseling records, and records of disciplinary actions—but not student homework or classroom work." [17]
In April 2022, Owasso teacher Tyler Wrynn was forced to resign from his post following video circulated by Libs of Tiktok in which he addressed his LGBT students, saying "If your parents don't accept who you are, fuck them. I'm your parents now". [18] [10]
In 2024, the school attracted international media attention following the February 7 fight in a West Campus girls' bathroom between Nex Benedict, a 10th grader who identified as nonbinary, and three girls whom Benedict accused of bullying them and their friends about their clothing. The school sent the students to the school's registered nurse but did not call the police or an ambulance. Later that afternoon, Benedict's mother took them to the emergency room and called the Owasso police. The police officer, who recorded the interview on his body camera, told the Benedicts that the school district “dropped the ball” by not contacting the police. Benedict was discharged that day but the next afternoon their mother called 911 and an ambulance took Benedict to the hospital, where they died. Armed with a search warrant requested on February 9, the police searched the high school for evidence of a possible murder. The police said a preliminary medical examiner's report following an autopsy did not find that the death resulted from trauma. [19] [20] [21] [11] On March 13, a medical examiner's summary report was released, citing suicide as Benedict's cause of death, and including a finding of a "combined toxicity" of diphenhydramine and fluoxetine. [16] [22]
The high school consists of two campuses: East Campus serves 11th and 12th graders and West Campus serves 9th and 10th graders. [34] The school also offers various concurrent academic programs for students through Tulsa Community College and Tulsa Technology Center. [35] [36]
Upon Oklahoma gaining statehood in 1907, the city of Owasso constructed its first public school (a three-story brick building that housed all of the district's grades) in what is now the city's downtown area. In 1965, a new high school (and what is now the Owasso 7th Grade Center) was built at the corner of 86th Street and Main Street, which served as the city's high school until a new one was constructed in 1975 at the corner of 86th Street and 129th Street. [37] This served as the main campus of Owasso High School until a merger with the Owasso Mid-High School in 2017, after which the two schools would be referred to East Campus and West Campus, respectively.
Owasso High School's mascot is the ram, although, before the 1950s, the school's mascot was the owl. [38]
The school currently fields teams in 18 different high school sports, including: [39]
Owasso's varsity football program has won three state championships throughout its history. [40] The team is currently led by Bill Blankenship, who has held the position as head coach since 2017. [41] The team plays its home games at Owasso Stadium on the school's East Campus.
Owasso holds several football rivalries with other Oklahoma schools. These include the "Battle of the 'Burbs" with Bixby High School and the yearly Folds of Honor Patriot Bowl with Broken Arrow High School. [42] [43]
The Rams' first football title was a 1974 Class 3A co-championship shared with Ada after a 7–7 tie. The game was played at (what was then) Skelly Stadium at the University of Tulsa. [44] The outcome of the game played a crucial role in the adoption of a new overtime rules format by the Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Association (OSSAA). [40]
On December 1, 2017, Owasso defeated Union (Tulsa) 21–14 in Oklahoma's Class 6A-1 championship game at H. A. Chapman Stadium. This made Owasso the first school since 1995 other than Union or Jenks to win the state title in the classification for the state's largest schools. [45]
Owasso won its third state title on December 7, 2019, by defeating the Jenks Trojans 14–6 in the Class 6A-1 championship game at the University of Central Oklahoma's Chad Richison Stadium. [46]
Owasso's baseball team has won 14 state championships, including 11 since 1998. The program won its most recent title in the 2022 Class 6A championship by defeating Edmond Santa Fe 7–3. [47] The team plays its home games at Stigall Field on the school's East Campus.
Owasso claims the most titles of any of the 32 teams in Oklahoma's 6A class (the next-highest being Union with 7 titles), as well as the second-most titles among all Oklahoma high schools. [48]
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 is a United States federal law that governs the access to educational information and records by public entities such as potential employers, publicly funded educational institutions, and foreign governments. The act is also referred to as the Buckley Amendment, for one of its proponents, Senator James L. Buckley of New York.
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