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Public high school in Orland Park, Illinois From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carl Sandburg High School, Sandburg, or CSHS, is a public four-year high school located at the intersection of La Grange Road and Southmoor Drive in Orland Park, Illinois, a southwest suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. It is part of Consolidated High School District 230, which also includes Victor J. Andrew High School and Amos Alonzo Stagg High School. The school is named for Illinois-born poet, Carl Sandburg.
Carl Sandburg High School | |
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Address | |
13300 S. LaGrange Road , Illinois 60462 United States | |
Coordinates | 41.6496°N 87.8564°W |
Information | |
School type | Public Secondary |
Motto | Innovation. Empathy. Leadership. |
Opened | 1954 |
School district | Consolidated H.S. 230 |
Superintendent | Dr. Robert Nolting[1] |
Principal | Dr. Derrick Smith[2] |
Faculty | 214 |
Teaching staff | 180.76 (FTE)[3] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Gender | Coed |
Enrollment | 2,894 (2022–23)[3] |
• Grade 9 | 681 students |
• Grade 10 | 727 students |
• Grade 11 | 714 students |
• Grade 12 | 772 students |
Average class size | 23 |
Student to teacher ratio | 16.01[3] |
Campus size | 40 acres (0.16 km2)[4] |
Area | Southwest Suburbs |
Campus type | Suburban |
Color(s) | Royal blue Gold[5] |
Athletics conference | Southwest Suburban |
Mascot | Eagle |
Team name | Eagles[5] |
Newspaper | Aquila[6] |
Yearbook | Poet[6] |
Communities served | Orland Park, Tinley Park, Oak Forest and Orland Hills |
Website | http://sandburg.d230.org/ |
This section needs expansion with: 1960s-2000s history. You can help by adding to it. (January 2011) |
In April 1952, two local school districts, Orland District 221 and Palos District 222 were consolidated into Consolidated High School District 230, for the express purpose of constructing a new high school.[7] This new high school would replace an older high school which had been run by the Orland district at one of its grammar schools, along with rented space around the town for history, English, home economics, and science classes.[7] The new school was designed to serve 450 students.[7] The site of the school was an old corn field, which at the time was surrounded by a forest preserve, a lake, and a golf course.[4]
A school board resolution called for the new school to be named for Carl Sandburg, out of "a desire for historic significance transcending purely local associations of the former school districts".[7] In April 1953, it was announced that the new high school building would be named for the poet, after Sandburg "consented and expressed his pleasure" in a letter to the school board.[7] At least until 1960, Sandburg visited the school every other year.[4]
Ground breaking took place on the US$930,000 structure on May 17, 1953.[8] The school was designed to be a one-story structure with a central gymnasium/auditorium capable of holding 1,200 people.[8] A smaller two story section was to house agriculture, science and business education classes as well as the school's library.[8] The school was built with the specific intent to build additions on to the building as the student population grew.[8] The school opened for classes in September 1954.[9] The school was formally dedicated on October 10, 1954, with the school's namesake in attendance.[10][11]
The district saw enormous growth, growing from 186 high school students just prior to the construction of the new school, to a projected population of over 900 for the 1956–57 school year.[12] In the summer of 1956, construction began on the first major addition to the school; an addition that more than doubled the school's size.[12] The 1956–57 school year also saw students attend in split shifts to alleviate the overcrowding that was already occurring.[12] A second gym, primarily for use by girls, was opened ahead of the rest of the addition in January 1958.[13][14] The remainder of the new addition was ready in May 1958, expanding the school's capacity to 1,700 students.[14] The original administration offices became the new book store, while the addition itself contained new classrooms and administrative offices, as well as expanded room for the music and industrial technology classes.[14]
No sooner was the new addition occupied, when, in the autumn of 1958, the school board issued a bond referendum to raise over US$1 million to further expand the school, and to purchase property for the site of a future high school.[15] This second addition, finished for the 1960–61 school year, included ten new classrooms, a new library (the old library was subdivided to make new classrooms) and the school's first swimming pool.[16]
The next bond issue came in 1966; this time a US$3.5 million request from the electorate to finance additions at Sandburg and its now sister school, Stagg High School. As a result, Sandburg saw more science laboratories as well as rooms for art, music, and industrial arts training.[17][18]
The first time Carl Sandburg visited Carl Sandburg High School in his home state of Illinois he was mistaken for a homeless man off the street and promptly ordered to leave the premises. School officials quickly learned their mistake. Sandburg, it is said, was gracious and extremely considerate through the whole thing. When Carl Sandburg died in 1967, the school's choir performed at the official memorial tribute, held at the Chicago Public Library.[19]
In 2005, Sandburg had an average composite ACT score of 22.3 and graduated 98.1% of its senior class. The average class size is 19.2. Sandburg has made Adequate Yearly Progress on the Prairie State Achievements Examination, a state test part of the No Child Left Behind Act.[20] Additionally, it has scored a 90.3 on the State Test Performance Index.
Sandburg has been named one of Newsweek's top 1,000 schools on several occasions.
The school has a 38% Advanced Placement (AP) participation rate and boasts a 79% pass rate. The average test taker takes 3.8 exams.[24] Students can choose from more than a dozen different AP courses to take during high school. Options include Calculus, Chemistry, U.S. History, Spanish Language, and others.
Carl Sandburg High School is home to numerous different co-curricular activities. The debate team has won eight state championships, seven in Public Forum and one in Lincoln Douglas[25] and ranked nationally in the Public Forum style of debate. The team has also qualified teams for the prestigious Tournament of Champions hosted annually at the University of Kentucky. The debate team joins hand-in hand with the likewise successful speech team to represent the Carl Sandburg Forensics Team, which ranks, "27 out of more than 3,000 schools nationwide"[26] with the combined skills of two groups. The speech team has won three state championships in the past three years alone. Both the Carl Sandburg High School debate team and speech team are recognized by the National Speech and Debate Association (formerly the National Forensics League). The Model United Nations club hosts an annual conference[27] and competes at conferences across the country.
Carl Sandburg High School currently has five bands, all co-curricular. Directed by Stewart Bailey and Brian Hillhouse, they include the entry level Varsity Band, intermediate Symphonic Band II, and the top Symphonic Band I, in addition to Percussion Band II and Percussion Band I. Sandburg also has a marching band with the typical high-school band brass, woodwind and percussion sections, in addition to color guard, a group that is included with the marching Eagles, but perform with flags, rifles, and sabers.
In early December 2008, the Sandburg Marching Eagles were selected to perform in the 56th Presidential Inaugural Parade in Washington, D.C., and the color guard was also displayed with a performance.[28] The Carl Sandburg Marching Eagles were also chosen to perform during half-time in the 2016 Sugar Bowl in New Orleans, Louisiana as well as the Sugar Bowl New Year's Eve Parade. Additionally the group performed in the Waikiki Holiday Parade in Hawaii, November 2019.
Carl Sandburg High School also has three levels of orchestras directed by Dr. Linda Nussbaum. In order from most to least advanced, they are Symphony, Philharmonic, and Concert Orchestra. The department is also home to the co-curricular Quartet Furioso, a group consisting of the four most prestigious players in the Symphony Orchestra.
The school currently has five curricular choirs and one co-curricular a capella group. Directed by Ms. Nicole Denofrio, they include: Freshman Choir, Concert Choir, Cantabile, Bel Canto, and Chorale (formerly Varsity Singers). Chamber Singers (also Accidentals and Eloquence), is an eighteen-member a cappella group that performs at many locations around the community, occasionally alongside the Quartet Furioso.
The District also has a Relay For Life event that donates money towards the American Cancer Society. In 2011, the Relay For Life of District 230 raised nearly $413,000. This placed them first in the state of youth events and boosted the event to the second largest all-youth event in the country. This second in the nation was only behind one large university, Virginia Tech. The Relay has been going on for the past 14 years and was the first event of its kind in the country.
Sandburg competes in the Southwest Suburban Conference (SWSC) and is a member of the Illinois High School Association (IHSA), which governs most sports and competitive activities in the state of Illinois. School teams are stylized as the "Eagles".
The school sponsors interscholastic teams for young men and women in basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, gymnastics, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field, volleyball, and water polo.[29] Young men may compete in baseball, football, and wrestling, while young women may compete in badminton, cheerleading, and softball.[29] While not sponsored by the IHSA, the school's athletic department also sponsors a poms team.[29]
Sandburg's cross country and track teams have been extremely successful and was home to world champion athlete Lukas Verzbicas. Verzbicas won the Gatorade Boys' Cross Country Runner of the Year award his junior and senior seasons. In addition, Verzbicas won the Nike and Foot Locker national championship and went on to run at the University of Oregon.[30] Another member of the cross country team, Pat McMahon, was awarded the prestigious $20,000 Foot Locker scholarship in the Spring of 2013.[31]
The following teams have placed in the top four of their respective IHSA sponsored state championship tournament or meet.[32]
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