Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Duncanville High School

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Type
  
Public

Principal
  
Tia Locke-Simmons

Campus type
  
Suburban

Total enrollment
  
3,765 (2011)

Current basketball coach
  
Cathy Self-Morgan

Established
  
1935

Grades
  
9-12

Color(s)
  
Red and royal blue

Phone
  
+1 972-708-3700

Duncanville High School

Address
  
900 Camp Wisdom Rd, Duncanville, TX 75116, USA

Similar
  
Duncanvi Independ School, Hastings Elementary School, Charles Acton Elementa, Grace R Brandenb Intermedi, Hyman Elementary School

Duncanville high school lip dub trailer 2016


Duncanville High School is a secondary school located in Duncanville, Texas, United States. The school is a part of Duncanville Independent School District.

Contents

The school includes grades 9 through 12. Duncanville High School reported an enrollment of 4,008 students to the University Interscholastic League (UIL) for the 2012-2014 realignment. The high school campus is the second largest in the nation in terms of campus size. The school principal is Andre Smith, and the associate principals are Flora Judd and Sandro Garcia. The school serves most of the city of Duncanville, as well as a portions of Cedar Hill, DeSoto, and a small portion of southwest Dallas.

In 2015, the school was rated "Met Standard" by the Texas Education Agency.

Duncanville high school graduation 2016


History

Duncanville High School held its first accredited graduating class in 1936. Classes moved in 1954 to a new location, now Reed Middle School. Eleven years later, it moved to its current location. Construction started on Sandra Meadows Memorial Arena in 2003. A new classroom wing was added, along with major renovations, in 2004.

Campus

Duncanville High School is the second largest high school campus in the United States. The 863,137 square feet (80,188.1 m2) campus is more than twice as large as the nearby Mountain View College, and it is over the size of four combined Wal-Mart Supercenters.

Athletics

The school mascot is the Panther. With the exception of softball and girls track and field, the school has won state titles in every major team sport, including football (1998), boys' basketball (1991, 1999, 2007), girls' basketball (1976, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1997, 2003, 2012, 2013, 2016), baseball (1975, 1976, 1990 ), volleyball (1995), boys' track and field (1999), boys' soccer (1986), and girls' soccer (1987, 1990).

The school's most notable success has been in girls' basketball, where it has won nine state titles, including three consecutive from 1988-1990 while winning 134 consecutive games in the state's largest enrollment classification (a state record) before losing in the 1992 state semifinal. They also won 105 consecutive games and two consecutive state titles 2012-2013 before losing in the 2014 state final. The girls teams were undefeated champions in 1989 (39-0), 1990 (37-0), 1997 (40-0), 2013 (42-0), and 2016 (39-0).

Music programs

Duncanville is the only 5A band program in the history of the Texas Music Educators' Association Honor Band competition to win three State Honor Band titles (1999, 2005, 2009).

Marching band

The Duncanville High School Marching Band has been the UIL state champion in 1986, 1990, and 2002.

Journalism

The school is also known for its journalism program, which publishes the Panther Tale yearbook, Panther Prints newspaper, and the district's public relations publication, Class Magazine. The yearbook and newspaper have won numerous awards, including a Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award and Gold and Silver Crown awards from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. For the first time in 2002, Duncanville received a Gold Crown for its newspaper and its yearbook, one of only two high schools in the nation to capture both honors that year.

Controversies

A video of a student from Duncanville, 18-year-old sophomore Jeff Bliss scolding his social studies/history teacher, went viral in May 2013, and was picked up by media. CBS local news quoted the student:

"You want kids to come into your class? You want them to get excited for this? You gotta come in here and make them excited. You want a kid to change and start doing better? You gotta touch his freakin' heart. Can't expect a kid to change if all you do is just tell 'em."

The video was caught on video on a cellphone, posted on YouTube, and picked up by Reddit, PhillyD and Gawker. The official reaction of the Duncanville Independent School District was not to discipline the student, but to offer private and public reminders that there are other ways to make a point. The district issued a statement, saying, in part: "He makes a number of valid statements about how classrooms across America need to change, and we view this as an opportunity to have more conversations about transforming our schools to better meet the needs of our students."

A video of students protesting the school's strict dress code were sent to several of the local media outlets, who reported on the incident. The Duncanville Independent School District said about 170 students were found in violation of the school's dress code and sent home. The crackdown on students violating the dress code is what led to a spontaneous mass protest. Administrators responded to the protest with a large police presence on campus a day afterward, which remained until the last day of the school year.

Notable alumni

  • Greg Abbott, Texas Governor
  • Brigetta Barrett, high jumper, won Olympic silver medal
  • Tamika Catchings, professional basketball player
  • Keith Creel, MLB pitcher
  • Donald "Ray" Crockett, football player in the National Football League; left cornerback with the Denver Broncos
  • Tim DeLaughter, lead singer of Tripping Daisy and The Polyphonic Spree
  • Barry Foster, American football NFL running back
  • Tiffany Jackson, professional basketball player
  • Jill Marie Jones, professional actress and model
  • Perry Jones professional basketball player
  • Greg Ostertag professional basketball player
  • Chris Owens, professional basketball player
  • Todd Ritchie, MLB pitcher
  • Gene Summers, rock/rockabilly singer; Rockabilly Hall of Fame inductee, 1997
  • Priscilla Shirer, actress
  • References

    Duncanville High School Wikipedia


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