South Burlington High School

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South Burlington High School
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Location
South Burlington, VT
Information
Type Public secondary
Established 1957
Principal Patrick Burke (2006-Present)
Grades 9 to 12
Enrollment 869 (as of 2013)
Color(s) Blue, Grey
Athletics 18 Sports
Athletics conference Northern Vermont Athletic Conference
(NVAC) and Vermont Principals' Association
Nickname SBHS
Team name Rebels
Website

South Burlington High School (SBHS) is a public secondary school located in South Burlington, Vermont. The school's mascot is the Rebels and the colors are blue and grey. The school is one of the largest public secondary schools in the U.S. state of Vermont. Enrollment in 2013 was 869.

History

The school's Career Development Center places hundreds of SBHS students in community service settings, professional internships, job shadowing experiences, senior challenge projects and mentorships in order to create "real world" relevance for students.[1]

Academics

The school is accredited as a public secondary school by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges. Students can enroll concurrently in both high school and technical programs, and approximately ten percent of students do so each year at either the Burlington Technical Center or the Center for Technology, Essex.

The school offers accelerated programs in Mathematics, Science, French, and Spanish; honors courses in English and Mathematics; and a selection of fourteen Advanced Placement ("AP") courses. AP courses include AP Biology ("AP Bio"), AP Calculus AB ("AP Calc"), AP Chemistry ("AP Chem"), AP Environmental Science ("APES"), AP European History ("AP Euro"), AP French, AP Psychology ("AP Psych"), AP Spanish, and AP US Government & Politics ("AP Gov"). Not all AP courses are taught every academic year. However, the district pays for the students' AP exams.

A portion of the student body commutes to the campus because of its academic offerings. Some students have elected to commute from areas where there are no local secondary schools, such as all of Grand Isle County and portions of Franklin County. The school also gets commuters from other inner Chittenden County municipalities such as Burlington, Essex, Shelburne, and Williston.

The school tested best in the county in reading proficiency in the New England Common Assessment Program test in 2008.[2] It was second best in the county in math proficiency.

Tuition was $12,816 in 2009-2010.[3] This tuition was paid by towns outside the school district sending students to this public school.

Student activities

Athletics

The SBHS athletic teams are known as the "Rebels" based on the city of South Burlington's relative location south of Burlington, Vermont's largest city. Due to the negative connotation of Confederate soldiers in the Northern United States, the mascot was removed but South Burlington High School continued with the nickname "Rebels". In Fall of 2015, there was a debate over replacing the nickname because of the connotation, but the school board ruled to keep it.[9] The school has a state-of-the-art stadium and running track. The hockey team plays off campus at nearby Dorset Park in the City of South Burlington's Cairns Arena, shared with the CVU Redhawks and Saint Michael's College Purple Knights (as home ice, along with a few other teams). SBHS's chief athletic rivals in the Division I Metro Conference are Essex High School, Champlain Valley Union High School, Burlington High School, Mount Mansfield Union High School, BFA-St. Albans and nearby private Catholic Rice Memorial High School.

Notable former Rebels athletes include longtime Clemson Tigers baseball coach Jack Leggett, former Boston Red Sox major league relief pitcher Mike Rochford, current minor league pitcher Casey Harman and France national baseball team pitcher Owen Ozanich.

The school has won many Vermont state championships in almost every sport.[10]

In 2013, the Indoor Track team premiered the first "Track life" video which eventually reached international acclaim.

SBHS has funded clubs for sports that are unconventional in the United States, such as cricket (begun in the Spring 2011 semester with the support of the high school's Desi community and one white student with a white Social Studies teacher as the advisor) and rugby (begun in the Spring 2008 semester with a male coach from Wales who coached the US women's national rugby union team and two female coaches who were members of that team). The rugby union team combines with students from Champlain Valley Union High School to form the "RebelHawks" and often plays a team called "Adirondack" from Saranac Lake, New York. The cricket team has played another club team of students based in Essex, Vermont at Fort Ethan Allen.

Drama and Music

The drama club produces three productions annually: a musical in the fall, a straight play in the winter and one-act plays in the spring.

List of Musicals
Music Ensembles
  • There are five vocal ensembles: the Mixed Chorus, Concert Chorus, Chamber Singers, Women's Chorus, and Men's Chorus (nicknamed "The Testostertones").
  • There are seven instrumental groups: the Concert Band, Symphonic Band, Wind Ensemble, the Jazz Improvisation Ensemble ("B" band), the Jazz Ensemble ("A" band), the World Drumming Ensemble, and the Guitar Ensemble. The Jazz Improvisation and Jazz Ensembles are both directed by Dave Grippo of the Giant Country Horns, the horn ensemble found in many of Phish's studio albums and live shows and recordings.

Footnotes

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External links

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  1. [1]
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  4. http://www.scied.science.doe.gov/RWDC/VT.html
  5. [2]
  6. http://www.scholarsbowl.org/
  7. http://www.realworlddesignchallenge.org/
  8. http://investor.ptc.com/releasedetail.cfm?releaseid=886767
  9. http://wwwname.wcax.com/story/29942990/rebels-days-numbered, Nickname controversy.
  10. Vermont Principals Assn. State Tournament History