Oswego High School (New York)

Oswego High School is a public coeducational four-year high school in Oswego, New York. It is the only public school serving grades 9-12 in the Oswego City School District. The principal is Ryan Lanigan. Assistant principals are Tara Clark and Kirk Mulverhill. The dean of students is Penny Morley.[2]

Oswego High School
Address
2 Buccaneer Blvd

,
13126

United States
Coordinates43°27′1.90″N 76°31′27.10″W
Information
TypePublic
School districtOswego City School District
NCES School ID362205003130[1]
PrincipalRyan Lanigan
Teaching staff12.31 (on an FTE basis)[1]
Grades9-12
Enrollment1,080 (2021-2022)[1]
Student to teacher ratio87.70[1]
CampusSuburban
Color(s)"Buc Blue" and White
   
MascotBuccaneers
NewspaperThe Buccaneer Bulletin
YearbookThe Paradox
Websitewww.oswego.org/highschool

Extracurricular activities

Athletics

Oswego High School teams compete in Section III of the New York State Public High School Athletic Association. Athletic facilities at the school include two gymnasiums, a swimming pool, a weight room, two softball fields, a baseball field, a track, and two multipurpose fields used for football, lacrosse, and soccer. Many events are held at Field, which hosts the track as well as a large athletic field.

Boys teams

Girls teams

Other options

Aside from the interscholastic sports teams, Oswego High School offers various other opportunities. Each October the school hosts a powderpuff football game where it formerly was girls of the junior class face off against senior girls.It is now open to both girls and boys.In addition, the school offers a downhill ski club, co-founded by Eric Tyler, Don Canfield, Chris Moss, and Alan Leighton in 1974, in which members take approximately six after-school ski trips to Labrador Mountain each year in the months of January and February.

Music

Oswego High School offers a music program including two orchestras, three choruses, three concert bands, and two jazz bands, which are offered as classes during the school day and perform an average of three concerts per year, generally in December for Christmas, March for Music In Our Schools Month, and May or June to honor graduating seniors.

Oswego's music program also includes the Marching Buccaneers marching band, which competes in the Small School I Class of the New York State Field Band Conference. Notable recent achievements include the Marching Bucs' first-place ranking at James Madison University's Parade of Champions in 2002, 2005 and 2009.

The chorus program, in conjunction with the drama program, also puts on an annual musical. In 2016, they performed Damn Yankees, and were nominated for twelve out of a possible fifteen awards at the Syracuse High School Theatre Awards.[3] Past productions include Pippin, Oliver!, Crazy for You, My Fair Lady, Beauty and the Beast, Les Misérables, and Grease.

The Paradox

The Paradox is Oswego High School's award-winning yearbook. It has won numerous awards from the Empire State School Press Association and the Columbia School Press Association.[4]

The Buccaneer Bulletin

The Buccaneer Bulletin is Oswego High School's monthly newspaper,[5] which has been awarded numerous gold medals from the Empire State School Press Association.[6] Members of the staff have been recognized individually by the Newspapers in Education program.[7]

WBUC

Students involved with WBUC at Oswego High School produce the morning announcements in an on-campus studio, which are broadcast to televisions in all classrooms as well as throughout the public locally on Time Warner Cable channel 16.

Statistics

Diversity

Gender

  • 50% female
  • 50% male"

Graduation rate

Oswego High School has a graduation rate of 75%, below the New York State average of 86%.[8]

Post graduation plans

  • 48% plan to attend a four-year college in New York State
  • 8% plan to attend a four-year college out of state
  • 26% plan to attend a two-year college in New York State
  • 3% plan to attend post secondary institutions in New York State[9]

Expenditures per pupil

An estimated $22,029 is spent annually per student.[8]

  • 68% instructional
  • 6% student & staff support
  • 10% administration
  • 17% other[10]

Teacher credentials

  • 2% of teachers have no valid teaching certificate
  • 5% of teachers have less than 3 years of experience
  • 21% of teachers have a master's degree or above[11]

Notable alumni

References

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