Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Bridgewater Raritan High School

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Type
  
Public high school

Principal
  
Dr. Mark Morrell

Grades
  
9th-12th

Athletics conference
  
Skyland Conference

Established
  
1950s; reopened 1995

Faculty
  
232.4 FTEs

Phone
  
+1 908-231-8660

Colors
  
Black, Silver

Bridgewater-Raritan High School

Asst. principals
  
James Argondizzo Roy Dragon Dr. Michael Godown Laura Zamrok

Address
  
600 Garretson Rd, Bridgewater, NJ 08807, USA

Motto
  
Pursuing Excellence in Education

Similar
  
Hillsboro High School, Raritan Valley Communi, Watchung Hills Regional, Immaculata High School, The Pingry School

Bridgewater-Raritan High School (commonly abbreviated as BRHS) is a four-year comprehensive public high school. It is the lone secondary school of the Bridgewater-Raritan Regional School District serving students in ninth through twelfth grades from Bridgewater Township and Raritan in Somerset County, New Jersey, United States. The school has been recognized by the National Blue Ribbon Schools Program, the highest award an American school can receive.

Contents

As of the 2014-15 school year, the school had an enrollment of 2,882 students and 232.4 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.4:1. There were 186 students (6.5% of enrollment) eligible for free lunch and 45 (1.6% of students) eligible for reduced-cost lunch.

History and symbols

Until the 1950s, high school students from the Bridgewater-Raritan Regional School District attended Somerville High School and Bound Brook High School. Bridgewater-Raritan High School was constructed in the late 1950s, with Dr. Norman A. Gathany serving as the school's first principal. Increasing enrollments in the early 1960s led to the construction of a second high school, which was named Bridgewater-Raritan High School East (The Minutemen), while the original high school was renamed Bridgewater-Raritan High School West (The Golden Falcons). Declining enrollments led to their consolidation into a single high school during the 1990s. The former High School West was expanded and updated over a period of several years, during which all of the district's high school students attended what had been High School East. In 1995, the former High School West reopened as the new consolidated Bridgewater-Raritan High School, and High School East became the district's Middle School.

The mascot of BRHS is the panther. BRHS's school colors are black and silver, with red serving as an accent color. The red in uniforms of the past has been mostly replaced by black, white and silver. The football, baseball, boys lacrosse, girls basketball, and various other teams have eliminated red from their uniforms. A minority of teams, including boys basketball and boys cross country, have continued use of red as an accent color. The uniforms for the marching band are black and red with silver buttons and helmets.

The high school's football field is "Basilone Field", named for John Basilone, a World War II recipient of the Medal of Honor who grew up in Raritan. On the wall of the field house next to the field is a mural honoring Basilone.

The high school offers classes ranging from AP European History to Introduction to culinary arts.

In December 2009, two minors, a 16-year-old Bridgewater-Raritan student and a 17-year-old student from nearby Immaculata High School, were arrested in connection with an alleged Columbine-like plan to attack the school.

Awards, recognition and rankings

During the 1999–2000 school year, Bridgewater-Raritan High School was recognized with the National Blue Ribbon School Award of Excellence by the United States Department of Education.

For the 1997–98 school year, Bridgewater-Raritan High School was named a "Star School" by the New Jersey Department of Education, the highest honor that a New Jersey school can achieve.

BRHS is one of only three high schools in the state to have received both awards.

In the 2011 "Ranking America's High Schools" issue by The Washington Post, the school was ranked 36th in New Jersey and 1,190th nationwide. In Newsweek's May 22, 2007 issue, ranking the country's top high schools, Bridgewater-Raritan High School was listed in 983rd place, the 29th-highest ranked school in New Jersey.

The school was the 76th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 339 schools statewide in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2014 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools", using a new ranking methodology. The school had been ranked 113th in the state of 328 schools in 2012, after being ranked 67th in 2010 out of 322 schools listed. The magazine ranked the school 91st in 2008 out of 316 schools. The school was also ranked 83rd in the magazine's September 2006 issue, which surveyed 316 schools across the state. In previous years, the school had been ranked in the 20's in the same ranking. Following publication of the 2006 New Jersey Monthly article, the school's principal issued a public statement explaining changes in the magazine's ranking methods that altered the school's standing, and generally criticizing the ranking methodology. Schooldigger.com ranked the school tied for 83d out of 381 public high schools statewide in its 2011 rankings (a decrease of 20 positions from the 2010 ranking) which were based on the combined percentage of students classified as proficient or above proficient on the mathematics (89.0%) and language arts literacy (96.1%) components of the High School Proficiency Assessment (HSPA).

In its 2013 report on "America's Best High Schools", The Daily Beast ranked the school 442nd in the nation among participating public high schools and 37th among schools in New Jersey.

In its listing of "America's Best High Schools 2016", the school was ranked 108th out of 500 best high schools in the country; it was ranked 20th among all high schools in New Jersey and seventh among the state's non-magnet schools.

Music

Bridgewater-Raritan High School offers an extensive range of music programs.

Choir

The award-winning Bridgewater-Raritan High School choral program ensembles compete and perform regularly and are often awarded with superior ratings. There are three curricular choirs: the Mixed Choir and two choirs that require an audition Select Women's Ensemble and Symphonic Choir. There are four extra-curricular ensembles, Ensembros (all male a cappella), the Glee Club, the Lorelei women's ensemble, and Men's Choir. Choirs at BRHS often collaborate with other ensembles, most recently having performed the Mozart Requiem with the Central New Jersey Symphony Orchestra. In the spring of 2015, the Symphonic Choir performed Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Solemn Vespers with the National Festival Chorus at Carnegie Hall. In 2009, the Chamber Choir participated in a concert of Brazilian music at Westminster Choir College. In the spring of 2008, the BRHS Chamber Choir performed Joseph Haydn's Kleine Orgelmesse with Masterwork Chorus and Orchestra at Drew University's Dorothy Young Center for the Arts.

Orchestra

The orchestras travel the region attending various festivals and events.

The orchestra program boasts high student enrollment and achievement. The ensembles annually approach serious orchestral literature, recently performing movements from Sibelius' Fifth Symphony. Past achievements include performing at Carnegie Hall in March 2008 along with the school's Wind Ensemble. In competition, ensembles have received ratings of superior. There are two curricular orchestral ensembles, the Concert Orchestra and the auditioned Symphonic Orchestra.

Band

The school's wind ensemble has performed in the State Gala concert numerous times within the past decade, with multiple performances in the featured evening portion. The wind ensemble has also been invited to perform at the Mid-Atlantic Wind Band Festival. The symphonic band and wind ensemble have performed at Carnegie Hall for the Eastern Wind Symphony Symphonic Gala in March 2013. Since 2002 BRHS has won three NJAJE state jazz band titles, eight NJ state marching band championships, four BOA regional class championships. In the fall of 2012, the BRHS marching band finished 18th in the nation as BOA semi-finalist and was awarded the national Espirit de Corps award, the highest placement of a NJ band in the history of Bands of America.

Extracurricular clubs

The high school currently has many ongoing clubs and activities, including a newly formed Model United Nations club and a long running Forensics Speech and Debate Team. In the past, the Forensics team has had National Championship qualifiers, as well as numerous state champions and one national champion. The school also has an Academic Team and Math League.

BRHS also is the home of Team 303 in the FIRST Robotics Competition, TEST Team 303. At the 2007 FIRST Robotics Challenge World Championships in Atlanta, GA, Team 303 ranked 23 in their division out of the 1500+ teams from across the globe that had attended the event. At the 2010 New Jersey Regional Competition, Team 303 were semifinalists. In the 2011 season the team won both the New Jersey and Philadelphia Regional Competitions, and were division quarter-finalists at the championships in St. Louis. In 2013, Team 303 ranked third in the Newton Division, and went on to win the Division against the number one alliance. The following year, Team 303 won the Chairman's Award at the Clifton District Event and at the Mid Atlantic Regional Championship, advancing them to the World Championship.

The school's honor societies include the National Honor Society, Tri-M Music Honor Society, and various language Honors Societies.

In the past decade, the high school has expanded its Peer Mediation program, training approximately 20 new mediators a year and student conflicts have followed a consistent downward trend since the program's inception.

The school's mock trial team has made the county playoffs in the annual tournament and achieved the Somerset County Title in 2005.

The Weightlifting Club includes over 60 trainees and several trainers. In the past there have also been BRHS delegations that participated in weightlifting and powerlifting competitions.

BRHS has two Envirothon teams which operate through the school but are almost entirely student-run. They joined the competition in the 2006 season. In the 2008, BRHS expanded to include a second team. Later that year Team One finished first in the New Jersey division and earned 14th out of 55 in The Canon Envirothon (which includes teams from the U.S. and Canada). In the 2009 season, Team One earned 6th and Team Two earned 11th at the New Jersey regional.

In addition to the Envirothon team, BRHS has a Science Olympiad team which had placed 6th regionally at the Princeton University Regional Competition. At states, they placed at the top 20 teams in 2009. The club is run by students along with an advisor.

BRTV is a school television program, produced in the school's television studio, that goes out live on Monday,Tuesdays, Wednesday, Thursday and Fridays. The schedule is: Monday&Tuesday - Regular announcements ; Wednesday - What's up Wednesday; Thursdays- Panther Power Plays and Friday - BRHS News. Media Communications, an elective, also uses the studio.

BRHS recently created a Science Bowl Team, which has competed in the 2011 and 2012 New Jersey Regional High School Science Bowls held at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.

The school's Physics Forum hosts talks from physicists and other scientists who use physics extensively in their work. Past speakers include Dr. Michael Strauss, professor of astrophysics at Princeton University, and Dr. John Parsons, professor of particle physics at Columbia University and collaborator on the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. All talks are open to the public.

Athletics

The Bridgewater-Raritan High School Panthers compete in the Skyland Conference, made up of public and parochial high schools covering Hunterdon County, Somerset County and Warren County in west Central Jersey, operating under the jurisdiction of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA). With 2,172 students in grades 10-12, the school was classified by the NJSIAA for the 2015-16 school year as North II, Group IV for most athletic competition purposes, which included schools with an enrollment of 1,114 to 4,800 students in that grade range.

The Bridgewater-Raritan East football team won the NJSIAA Central Jersey Group III state sectional championships in 1974 and the Central Jersey Group II title in 1989.

The school was recognized as the Group IV winner of the NJSIAA ShopRite Cup in 2005–06. The award recognized the school for achieving a tie for 3rd in Girls Soccer, 1st in Boys Soccer, a tie for 3rd in Girls Volleyball, 2nd in Field Hockey, 1st in Boys Swimming, a tie for 3rd in Boys Lacrosse, 1st in Boys Tennis and 1st in Boys Volleyball.

Kristen Helmstetter broke the girls basketball record for most points in her high school career, topping her coach's previous record with 1,476 career points.

The boys soccer team won the 2005 Group IV state championship over Shawnee High School completing the best record the soccer team has ever seen with 23 wins and one loss, finishing the season with a ranking of second in the state and a national ranking of 24th.

In 2006, the boys soccer team repeated as Group IV North II state sectional champions, defeating Elizabeth High School 3-0.

The boys volleyball won the 2005 state championship over Clifton High School, 25-20, 21-25, 25-20.

The boys tennis team won the 2005 North II, Group IV state sectional championship with a 4-1 win against Westfield High School. The tennis team won the 2006 Group IV state championship, defeating Cherry Hill High School East 3-2 in the semifinals and West Windsor-Plainsboro High School South 3-2 in the finals to take the title.

The 2007 girls tennis team won the North II, Group IV state sectional championship with a 5-0 win over J. P. Stevens High School in the tournament final. The team moved on to win the Group IV state championship with a 3-2 win over Montgomery High School in the semifinals and Bergen County Technical High School in the finals by a 4-1 score. The 2003 team lost in the Group IV final to Cherry Hill High School East.

The boys swimming team won the 2006 Public A state championship over Cherry Hill High School West with a score of 88-82, winning their first state championship after going into the final event in a tie. In back to back seasons in 2010 and 2011 the boys swim team took home the New Jersey state championship trophy, defeating Cherry Hill High School East both years.

The field hockey team won the North I/II Group IV state sectional championship in 2005, the North I Group IV in 2006, 2007, 2011 and 2013, and the North II, Group IV in 2008, 2009, 2012 and 2014. The team was the runner up for the Group IV state championship in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014. In 2007, the field hockey team won the North I, Group IV state sectional championship with a 2-0 win over Montclair High School in the tournament final.

In 2003, the girls soccer team won the North II, Group IV state sectional championship with a win over Roxbury High School and were Group IV state finalist. The girls soccer team won the North II, Group IV state sectional championship in 2007 with a 2-1 win over Ridge High School in the tournament final. In 2013, the girls soccer team captured their first ever Group IV state title by defeating defending champion Montgomery High School 1-0. The team ended the season ranked #2 in New Jersey by The Star-Ledger.

The boys lacrosse team won the Group IV state title in 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2015 and won the overall state championship in 1998, 2011, 2012 and 2015. The team won the 2011 Tournament of Champions with a 6-5 win over Summit Senior High School, marking the program's second state title and breaking Summit's 68 game winning streak. The Panthers won their first state lacrosse title in 1998. To begin the 2012 season, the Panthers were ranked 5th in the nation and 1st in the state. They finished the season undefeated at 21-0, extending their overall winning streak to 36 games. Along the way, the Panthers won their second consecutive Somerset County, NJ Group 4, and NJ Tournament of Champions titles, and head coach Chuck Apel achieved his 400th win. With a 23-0 record, the boys lacrosse team was the state's only undefeated team in 2015, winning the Somerset County tournament, Group IV title and the Tournament of Champions with a 16-13 win vs. Bergen Catholic High School.

The girls' lacrosse team won the Group IV state championship in 2009, defeating Washington Township High School in the tournament final.

The Bridgewater-Raritan football team made a run in the 2015 playoffs. Carrying a perfect 11-0 record to the Group V North state championship game, they played and lost to another undefeated team, the Westfield High School Blue Devils.

Administration

Core members of the school's administration are:

  • Dr. Mark Morrell - Principal
  • James Argondizzo - Assistant Principal
  • Roy Dragon - Assistant Principal
  • Dr. Michael Godown - Assistant Principal
  • Laura Zamrok - Assistant Principal
  • Notable alumni

  • Matt Kassel (born 1989), midfielder for the Philadelphia Union in the MLS.
  • Derek Luke (born 1993), professional soccer who plays for FC Cincinnati in the United Soccer League.
  • Eric Murdock (born 1968), former professional basketball player.
  • Scott Schwartz (born 1968), actor from The Toy and A Christmas Story.
  • Jeffrey Vanderbeek (born 1957), owner of the New Jersey Devils.
  • Tom Wilson (born 1967), chairman of the New Jersey Republican State Committee from 2004 to 2009.
  • References

    Bridgewater-Raritan High School Wikipedia