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Albany High School (New York)

Albany High School (AHS) in Albany, New York, United States, is a public high school with an enrollment of about 7,427 students for the 2023-2024 school year.[2] The school is part of the City School District of Albany. It opened on September 7, 1868, as the Albany Free Academy. Albany High has been located at 700 Washington Avenue since 1974. The school is an International Baccalaureate school with an Advanced Placement program. The school newspaper is The Nest (published online, it replaced the longtime print newspaper The Patroon, in 2012), the literary magazine is Inkblot, and the yearbook is Prisms.

Albany High School
Address
700 Washington Avenue

,
12203

United States
Information
TypeUrban public high school
MottoAssiduity[citation needed]
EstablishedSeptember 7, 1868
School districtCity School District of Albany
PrincipalJodi M. Commerford
Faculty217
Grades9–12
Enrollment2,520 (2015–16)[1]
Color(s)Blue and Gray
MascotFalcon
AccreditationMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools International Baccalaureate World Schools
NicknamesAlbany High, AHS
Websitehttps://www.albanyschools.org/schools/albanyhigh/index

History edit

On September 7, 1868, when the Albany Free Academy opened its doors to the public, there were 141 students enrolled. For a time, the school was located in Van Vechten Hall at 119 State Street until it was relocated to Eagle Street on May 4, 1876 (where the Albany County Courthouse now can be found). In 1913, the school was relocated to a new location that was more centrally located on North Lake Avenue between Washington Avenue and Western Avenue so that it would be more accessible for students. This location served as Albany High School until the 1974-75 school year, when the school relocated once again to its current campus at 700 Washington Ave. The 1973-74 Albany High building served as Philip Schuyler Elementary School until 2005, and then as temporary swing space for several City School District of Albany schools during a sweeping district-wide facilities project during the 2000s. The district sold the building to the University at Albany in 2010.

Prior to 1974, Albany had two high schools, Albany High and the former Philip Schuyler High School in the South End. The schools merged for the 1974-75 school year to become the "new" Albany High at the 700 Washington Ave. location.

Until 2011, Albany High was divided into two large administrative divisions known as the "North House" and the "South House." Each house had its own cafeteria and administrative offices.

In 2011, the school created four themed learning communities referred to as academies (Citizenship Academy, Discovery Academy, Innovation Academy and Leadership Academy). As a result of the establishment of these four academies, students have access to additional support staff and have the opportunity to experience a themed academic environment while still in high school. It is important to note that all of Albany High's students are assigned to one of the four academies. The Citizenship and Innovation academies share the former South House cafeteria, while the Discovery and Leadership Academies share the former North House cafeteria. All elective courses within the school are grouped according to the theme of a particular academy; however, regardless of the academy a student is enrolled in, he or she may take any of the wide variety of elective courses within the school.

In November 2015, city voters narrowly defeated a $196 million plan to renovate and expand Albany High by a close vote of 5,794 to 5,897.[3]

Voters approved a revised $179.9 million proposal in February 2016. Construction began in 2018, to be completed in four phases. The full Rebuilding Albany High School project is on schedule for completion in 2025.

Albany High School is the only comprehensive public high school in the city.[4]

In 2021, Onovu Otitigbe-Dangerfield became the first African-American valedictorian in the school's 152-year history.[5]

Academics edit

Albany High has a wide variety of academic programs, including a longstanding Advanced Placement program offering 19 courses.[6] In 2005, AHS was accredited as an International Baccalaureate World School and introduced an IB Diploma Program, which consists of a series of college-level courses for juniors and seniors leading to an alternative diploma.[7] Every year, several IB or AP students typically attend some of the nation's top-ranked universities, including those in the Ivy League. Albany High has made Newsweek's list of America's Top Public High Schools on multiple occasions, most recently in 2010 (when it ranked 976).[8][9] The ranking is based on the Challenge Index, which calculates the number of AP and IB exams taken at a school divided by the number of graduating seniors.[10]

Most academic courses are taught at Core, Regents, and Honors levels. Three foreign languages (Spanish, French, Chinese), are available. Within New York State, AHS was one of the first public schools outside of New York City to offer any form of Chinese as a foreign language. The school also has Senior Career Explorations (internships) in six areas[11] and a Project Lead the Way engineering program. An annex, the Abrookin Vocation-Technical Center, offers many career and technical courses

School receivership edit

In 2015 the New York State Education Department classified Albany High School as a "Struggling School" and placed it under the school receivership of the Superintendent of the City School District of Albany.[12][13] If the school does not demonstrate improvement in student performance within two years an Independent Receiver will be appointed by the district to serve under contract to the State Education Commissioner, and the district will have no control over decisions affecting the school.[14]

Campus edit

Albany High's current location at 700 Washington Avenue, which opened in 1974. The school consists of three brick buildings connected by indoor pedestrian bridges. The largest of these, the academic building, contains the classrooms, cafeterias, and media center. Across from the academic structure are the physical education building (housing the gymnasiums, locker rooms, and HVAC equipment) and another building containing the main office, auditorium, and music classrooms. Three bridges on the second floor connect the buildings.

Academic building edit

 
A rear view of Albany High's academic building showing Towers One, Two, and Three.

The academic building is the largest edifice on the Albany High School campus and the only one with three stories. The ground floor contains the two cafeterias (Citizenship/Innovation and Discovery/Leadership), kitchen, special education classrooms, technology classrooms, art studios, a recently opened school store known as "Falcons Rock", a Model U.N. room, a mock courtroom, various other classrooms, and even a credit union room known as the "Falcon Branch". The second floor is the main hub of the school because it is connected to the other two buildings by the pedestrian bridges. It contains the media center (the large school library housing over 26,000 books[15] as well as PC desktop computers). The library was fully renovated in 2012. The second floor also contains the college center (a relatively new room with computers intended to be used by students to research colleges[16]), and many classrooms. The third floor is entirely occupied by classrooms. All the science labs are located on this floor.

The dominant architectural feature of the rectangular building is its six towers, numbered one through six. Towers One, Two, and Three are on the west side, and Towers Four, Five, and Six are on the east side. The towers contain stairwells, restrooms, and assorted offices (Tower Two contains the school's elevator). They also have skylights above each stairwell. Students in Citizenship and Innovation Academies enter the school through Tower Six while students in Discovery and Leadership Academies enter through Tower Four.

The bulk of the Innovation Academy classrooms are located in the southern half of the first and second floors. The bulk of the Discovery Academy classrooms are located in the northern half of the second floor. The third floor of the academic building contains the bulk of the Leadership Academy and Citizenship Academy classrooms. The bulk of the Citizenship Academy classrooms are located in the southern half of the building and the bulk of the Leadership Academy are located in the northern half of the building. The four academies form academy wings painted their own distinct color (green for Citizenship Academy, gold for Discovery Academy, red for Innovation Academy, and blue for Leadership Academy) and has its own academy office and health office. The large guidance suite located in the Discovery Academy wing on the second floor provides all four academies with a set number of guidance counselors.

Room numbers in the academic building have three digits, with the first digit indicating the floor number. The other two digits depend on the side of the building, with the rooms of the northern half having odd numbers and the rooms of the Southern Half having even numbers. Rooms numbers increase as one goes towards the center of the building.

Physical education building edit

The physical education building contains the indoor athletic facilities. These include the main gymnasium (which can be divided into three smaller gyms using motorized curtains), "Rubber Gym" (a smaller gym named for its floor material), wrestling gym, dance studio, and six-lane swimming pool. The building also houses the male and female locker rooms, the athletic health office, the athletic director's office, and the Falcon Fitness Center, a recently renovated weight room. On the first floor of the two story building is the boiler room housing the school's heating equipment. The two air conditioning units are located on the roof.

Auditorium building edit

The third building on the Albany High campus houses the auditorium, main offices, and music classrooms. The diamond shaped auditorium has red cushioned seats, a triangular stage, and a catwalk area which is accessible by ladder. Located on the ground floor, the music facilities include a rehearsal rooms, choir room, office, and several practice rooms. The auditorium building contains the main lobby and serves as an entrance for school visitors.

Courtyard edit

 
The courtyard

The courtyard is located between the three buildings. A brick and concrete space with small trees and many benches, it serves as an entrance place for students during the morning. Senior year students have the privilege of eating lunch here. The school's three walkway bridges pass over the courtyard. Its concrete pavement was resurfaced in 2011.

Athletic fields edit

The Albany High campus contains athletic fields for soccer, baseball, American football, and softball. The school's running track was resurfaced in 2003.[17] Albany High's varsity football, soccer and baseball teams play their games at nearby Bleecker Stadium.

Abrookin Career and Technical Center edit

The Abrookin Career and Technical Center (formerly known as Abrookin Vocational-Technical Center) is a disconnected building of Albany High School located three blocks north of the main campus at 99 Kent Street. The building offers many career and technical courses in fields such as construction, cooking, electricity, engineering, cosmetology, computers (including a Cisco networking academy), and even an emergency medical technician course. It also houses family and consumer sciences courses. Students can walk to Abrookin from the main campus for a 1 to 3 period-long class. It takes about eight minutes to walk from the main campus to Abrookin. The building opened in 1974 as the Albany Occupational Center. The building was later renamed after the late school board member Manny Abrookin (1922–1994).

Demographics edit

Of Albany High School's approximately 2,600 students, about 54% are African-American, 21% are White (non-Hispanic), 13% are Hispanic, 11% are Asian, and 1% are Native American or multiracial. The school has about 159 teachers and 49 other professional staff, with a student-to-teacher ratio of approximately 14:1.[18] Albany High enrolls students from more than 40 foreign nations.

Athletics edit

Albany High School's interscholastic athletics program is affiliated with the New York State Public High School Athletic Association (Section II). Albany High's student-athletes competed in the Big Ten Conference for many years until the conference disbanded following the 2013–14 school year. Many sports are played at both varsity and junior varsity levels. Albany High School soccer team made it through to the sectional semi-final in 2007, losing to Niskayuna High School. In 2013 Albany made it to the finals in sectionals, eventually losing to 2nd seed Guilderland. Recently, their varsity basketball teams have found success, as the girls’ team won the 2022 and 2023 Section II Championship, and the boys’ team made it to the 2022 Section II Semifinals. The boys’ season was very monumental, as it was the school’s first trip to the Class AA Final Four since 2011, the most wins (16) in more than two decades, and the first Suburban Council Gray Division championship. Isaiah Austin also became the first member of the boys’ team to score 1,000 career points in 19 years.

Notable alumni edit

Principals edit

  • 1868 – 1886: Arianna M Gauthier
  • 1886 – 1911: Oscar D. Robinson
  • 1911 – 1916: Frank A. Gallup
  • 1916 – 1951: Harry E. Pratt
  • 1951 – 1959: Stanley Heason
  • 1959 – 1967: Douglas W. Lincoln
  • 1968 – 1986: Armand Rodriguez
  • 1987 – 1995: David McGuire
  • 1995 – 1998: Willard Washburn
  • 1998 – 2001: John Metallo
  • 2001 – 2002: John Pellitier
  • 2002 – 2006: Michael T. Cioffi
  • 2006 – 2009: F. Maxine Fantroy-Ford
  • 2009 – 2012: David C. McCalla[29]
  • 2012 – 2015: Cecily L. Wilson-Turner[30]
  • 2015 – 2018: Dale Getto[31]
  • 2018 – : Jodi M. Commerford[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  2. ^ "Albany Senior High School". www.albanyshs.wa.edu.au. Retrieved March 31, 2020.
  3. ^ Lucas, Dave (November 12, 2015). "Voters Reject Albany High Proposal". WAMC. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  4. ^ List of Schools (ACSD website) October 17, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved July 9, 2009.
  5. ^ "After 152 years, Albany High has a Black valedictorian". WNYT (TV). March 28, 2021. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
  6. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 11, 2008. Retrieved May 28, 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ "Albany High School". International Baccalaureate®. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  8. ^ . Albany City School District press release, September 24, 2009.
  9. ^ "Albany school gets a favorable rating". Albany Times Union, September 25, 2009.
  10. ^ "America's Top Public High Schools". Newsweek, June 8, 2009.
  11. ^ Senior Career Exploration Programs October 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ "Commissioner Elia Identifies 144 Struggling and Persistently Struggling Schools to Begin Implementation of School Receivership in New York State". New York State Education Department. July 16, 2015. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  13. ^ "School Receivership". New York State Education Department. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  14. ^ "Receivership". Albany High School. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  15. ^ "Albany's public schools by the numbers" from Capital Education, Spring 2008
  16. ^ AHS College Center June 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Facilities Plan: Status Report, Albany.
  18. ^ "2013 – ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL – Report Card – NYSED Data Site". data.nysed.gov.
  19. ^ a b c d e "Albany schools to showcase their own hall of famers". Albany Times Union. August 25, 2009
  20. ^ (PDF). trackandfieldnews.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  21. ^ Fitzgerald, Bryan (April 12, 2011). "Long journey from Albany: Gene A. Cretz rose to be U.S. ambassador to Libya". Albany Times Union. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  22. ^ Hornbeck, Leigh (April 23, 2011). "Alfred Freedman dies; Albany native headed psychiatric group". Albany Times Union. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
  23. ^ Harsha, David Addison (1891). Noted living Albanians and state officials. A series of biographical sketches. Albany, NY: Weed, Parsons and Company. p. 237 – via Archive.org.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on July 1, 2017. Retrieved August 11, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  25. ^ "Will Occupy Wall Street Upend Obama's Presidential Election? – New York Magazine". NYMag.com. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  26. ^ Larissa MacFarquhar (November 3, 2012). "Occupy Sandy". The New Yorker. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  27. ^ Sandy Storyline | 2013 Tribeca Film Festival November 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ "'Housing Is a Human Right' Documents Struggle For Home". The Huffington Post. March 18, 2010. Retrieved January 26, 2016.
  29. ^ . Retrieved July 9, 2009.
  30. ^ . Albany High School. Archived from the original on September 29, 2014. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  31. ^ . www.albanyschools.org. Archived from the original on September 19, 2015.
  32. ^ "City School District of Albany".

    External links edit

    • Albany High School website
    • Albany City School District website

    42°40′01″N 73°46′58″W / 42.666821°N 73.78268°W / 42.666821; -73.78268

    albany, high, school, york, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Albany High School New York news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Albany High School AHS in Albany New York United States is a public high school with an enrollment of about 7 427 students for the 2023 2024 school year 2 The school is part of the City School District of Albany It opened on September 7 1868 as the Albany Free Academy Albany High has been located at 700 Washington Avenue since 1974 The school is an International Baccalaureate school with an Advanced Placement program The school newspaper is The Nest published online it replaced the longtime print newspaper The Patroon in 2012 the literary magazine is Inkblot and the yearbook is Prisms Albany High SchoolAddress700 Washington AvenueAlbany New York 12203United StatesInformationTypeUrban public high schoolMottoAssiduity citation needed EstablishedSeptember 7 1868School districtCity School District of AlbanyPrincipalJodi M CommerfordFaculty217Grades9 12Enrollment2 520 2015 16 1 Color s Blue and GrayMascotFalconAccreditationMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools International Baccalaureate World SchoolsNicknamesAlbany High AHSWebsitehttps www albanyschools org schools albanyhigh index Contents 1 History 2 Academics 2 1 School receivership 3 Campus 3 1 Academic building 3 2 Physical education building 3 3 Auditorium building 3 4 Courtyard 3 5 Athletic fields 3 6 Abrookin Career and Technical Center 4 Demographics 5 Athletics 6 Notable alumni 7 Principals 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editOn September 7 1868 when the Albany Free Academy opened its doors to the public there were 141 students enrolled For a time the school was located in Van Vechten Hall at 119 State Street until it was relocated to Eagle Street on May 4 1876 where the Albany County Courthouse now can be found In 1913 the school was relocated to a new location that was more centrally located on North Lake Avenue between Washington Avenue and Western Avenue so that it would be more accessible for students This location served as Albany High School until the 1974 75 school year when the school relocated once again to its current campus at 700 Washington Ave The 1973 74 Albany High building served as Philip Schuyler Elementary School until 2005 and then as temporary swing space for several City School District of Albany schools during a sweeping district wide facilities project during the 2000s The district sold the building to the University at Albany in 2010 Prior to 1974 Albany had two high schools Albany High and the former Philip Schuyler High School in the South End The schools merged for the 1974 75 school year to become the new Albany High at the 700 Washington Ave location Until 2011 Albany High was divided into two large administrative divisions known as the North House and the South House Each house had its own cafeteria and administrative offices In 2011 the school created four themed learning communities referred to as academies Citizenship Academy Discovery Academy Innovation Academy and Leadership Academy As a result of the establishment of these four academies students have access to additional support staff and have the opportunity to experience a themed academic environment while still in high school It is important to note that all of Albany High s students are assigned to one of the four academies The Citizenship and Innovation academies share the former South House cafeteria while the Discovery and Leadership Academies share the former North House cafeteria All elective courses within the school are grouped according to the theme of a particular academy however regardless of the academy a student is enrolled in he or she may take any of the wide variety of elective courses within the school In November 2015 city voters narrowly defeated a 196 million plan to renovate and expand Albany High by a close vote of 5 794 to 5 897 3 Voters approved a revised 179 9 million proposal in February 2016 Construction began in 2018 to be completed in four phases The full Rebuilding Albany High School project is on schedule for completion in 2025 Albany High School is the only comprehensive public high school in the city 4 In 2021 Onovu Otitigbe Dangerfield became the first African American valedictorian in the school s 152 year history 5 Academics editAlbany High has a wide variety of academic programs including a longstanding Advanced Placement program offering 19 courses 6 In 2005 AHS was accredited as an International Baccalaureate World School and introduced an IB Diploma Program which consists of a series of college level courses for juniors and seniors leading to an alternative diploma 7 Every year several IB or AP students typically attend some of the nation s top ranked universities including those in the Ivy League Albany High has made Newsweek s list of America s Top Public High Schools on multiple occasions most recently in 2010 when it ranked 976 8 9 The ranking is based on the Challenge Index which calculates the number of AP and IB exams taken at a school divided by the number of graduating seniors 10 Most academic courses are taught at Core Regents and Honors levels Three foreign languages Spanish French Chinese are available Within New York State AHS was one of the first public schools outside of New York City to offer any form of Chinese as a foreign language The school also has Senior Career Explorations internships in six areas 11 and a Project Lead the Way engineering program An annex the Abrookin Vocation Technical Center offers many career and technical courses School receivership edit In 2015 the New York State Education Department classified Albany High School as a Struggling School and placed it under the school receivership of the Superintendent of the City School District of Albany 12 13 If the school does not demonstrate improvement in student performance within two years an Independent Receiver will be appointed by the district to serve under contract to the State Education Commissioner and the district will have no control over decisions affecting the school 14 Campus editAlbany High s current location at 700 Washington Avenue which opened in 1974 The school consists of three brick buildings connected by indoor pedestrian bridges The largest of these the academic building contains the classrooms cafeterias and media center Across from the academic structure are the physical education building housing the gymnasiums locker rooms and HVAC equipment and another building containing the main office auditorium and music classrooms Three bridges on the second floor connect the buildings Academic building edit nbsp A rear view of Albany High s academic building showing Towers One Two and Three The academic building is the largest edifice on the Albany High School campus and the only one with three stories The ground floor contains the two cafeterias Citizenship Innovation and Discovery Leadership kitchen special education classrooms technology classrooms art studios a recently opened school store known as Falcons Rock a Model U N room a mock courtroom various other classrooms and even a credit union room known as the Falcon Branch The second floor is the main hub of the school because it is connected to the other two buildings by the pedestrian bridges It contains the media center the large school library housing over 26 000 books 15 as well as PC desktop computers The library was fully renovated in 2012 The second floor also contains the college center a relatively new room with computers intended to be used by students to research colleges 16 and many classrooms The third floor is entirely occupied by classrooms All the science labs are located on this floor The dominant architectural feature of the rectangular building is its six towers numbered one through six Towers One Two and Three are on the west side and Towers Four Five and Six are on the east side The towers contain stairwells restrooms and assorted offices Tower Two contains the school s elevator They also have skylights above each stairwell Students in Citizenship and Innovation Academies enter the school through Tower Six while students in Discovery and Leadership Academies enter through Tower Four The bulk of the Innovation Academy classrooms are located in the southern half of the first and second floors The bulk of the Discovery Academy classrooms are located in the northern half of the second floor The third floor of the academic building contains the bulk of the Leadership Academy and Citizenship Academy classrooms The bulk of the Citizenship Academy classrooms are located in the southern half of the building and the bulk of the Leadership Academy are located in the northern half of the building The four academies form academy wings painted their own distinct color green for Citizenship Academy gold for Discovery Academy red for Innovation Academy and blue for Leadership Academy and has its own academy office and health office The large guidance suite located in the Discovery Academy wing on the second floor provides all four academies with a set number of guidance counselors Room numbers in the academic building have three digits with the first digit indicating the floor number The other two digits depend on the side of the building with the rooms of the northern half having odd numbers and the rooms of the Southern Half having even numbers Rooms numbers increase as one goes towards the center of the building Physical education building edit The physical education building contains the indoor athletic facilities These include the main gymnasium which can be divided into three smaller gyms using motorized curtains Rubber Gym a smaller gym named for its floor material wrestling gym dance studio and six lane swimming pool The building also houses the male and female locker rooms the athletic health office the athletic director s office and the Falcon Fitness Center a recently renovated weight room On the first floor of the two story building is the boiler room housing the school s heating equipment The two air conditioning units are located on the roof Auditorium building edit The third building on the Albany High campus houses the auditorium main offices and music classrooms The diamond shaped auditorium has red cushioned seats a triangular stage and a catwalk area which is accessible by ladder Located on the ground floor the music facilities include a rehearsal rooms choir room office and several practice rooms The auditorium building contains the main lobby and serves as an entrance for school visitors Courtyard edit nbsp The courtyard The courtyard is located between the three buildings A brick and concrete space with small trees and many benches it serves as an entrance place for students during the morning Senior year students have the privilege of eating lunch here The school s three walkway bridges pass over the courtyard Its concrete pavement was resurfaced in 2011 Athletic fields edit The Albany High campus contains athletic fields for soccer baseball American football and softball The school s running track was resurfaced in 2003 17 Albany High s varsity football soccer and baseball teams play their games at nearby Bleecker Stadium Abrookin Career and Technical Center edit The Abrookin Career and Technical Center formerly known as Abrookin Vocational Technical Center is a disconnected building of Albany High School located three blocks north of the main campus at 99 Kent Street The building offers many career and technical courses in fields such as construction cooking electricity engineering cosmetology computers including a Cisco networking academy and even an emergency medical technician course It also houses family and consumer sciences courses Students can walk to Abrookin from the main campus for a 1 to 3 period long class It takes about eight minutes to walk from the main campus to Abrookin The building opened in 1974 as the Albany Occupational Center The building was later renamed after the late school board member Manny Abrookin 1922 1994 Demographics editOf Albany High School s approximately 2 600 students about 54 are African American 21 are White non Hispanic 13 are Hispanic 11 are Asian and 1 are Native American or multiracial The school has about 159 teachers and 49 other professional staff with a student to teacher ratio of approximately 14 1 18 Albany High enrolls students from more than 40 foreign nations Athletics editAlbany High School s interscholastic athletics program is affiliated with the New York State Public High School Athletic Association Section II Albany High s student athletes competed in the Big Ten Conference for many years until the conference disbanded following the 2013 14 school year Many sports are played at both varsity and junior varsity levels Albany High School soccer team made it through to the sectional semi final in 2007 losing to Niskayuna High School In 2013 Albany made it to the finals in sectionals eventually losing to 2nd seed Guilderland Recently their varsity basketball teams have found success as the girls team won the 2022 and 2023 Section II Championship and the boys team made it to the 2022 Section II Semifinals The boys season was very monumental as it was the school s first trip to the Class AA Final Four since 2011 the most wins 16 in more than two decades and the first Suburban Council Gray Division championship Isaiah Austin also became the first member of the boys team to score 1 000 career points in 19 years Notable alumni editGlen Barker Houston Astros outfielder 19 Alex Gordon rugby union Rugby flanker for Allegheny Rugby Union Tracy Baskin Former Olympiac track and field athlete in the 800 meters former 4 by 4 co world record holder 3 rank 1988 US men 800m 20 Carolee Carmello Broadway actress who made her Broadway debut in City of Angels she starred in Lestat Parade and Mamma Mia Lionel Chalmers Basketball player who went to Xavier University and the NBA He was drafted by the L A Clippers and traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves for the 2005 2006 NBA season Gene Cretz Class of 1968 former U S Ambassador to Libya and U S Ambassador to Ghana taught English at Albany High from 1977 to 1979 21 William Devane Film and television actor 19 Alfred Freedman M D Class of 1933 Psychiatrist who headed the American Psychiatric Association when it declared homosexuality was not a mental disorder in 1973 22 Stefon Harris Class of 1991 Jazz musician vibraphonist 19 Charlie Leigh NFL player for the 17 0 1972 Miami Dolphins Super Bowl Champions primarily as a kick returner 19 James Hilton Manning mayor of Albany 23 Catherine McCabe Class of 1969 Acting Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency in 2017 24 Michael Premo Class of 1999 Award winning artist activist and organizer He is a central figure in the Occupy Wall Street 25 and Occupy Sandy movements 26 co director of the participatory documentary Sandy Storyline 27 and creator of the documentary project Housing is a Human Right 28 Carrie Turner Popular New York actress in the 1880s and 1890s Charlayne Woodard Award winning American film stage and television actor and playwright 19 Principals edit1868 1886 Arianna M Gauthier 1886 1911 Oscar D Robinson 1911 1916 Frank A Gallup 1916 1951 Harry E Pratt 1951 1959 Stanley Heason 1959 1967 Douglas W Lincoln 1968 1986 Armand Rodriguez 1987 1995 David McGuire 1995 1998 Willard Washburn 1998 2001 John Metallo 2001 2002 John Pellitier 2002 2006 Michael T Cioffi 2006 2009 F Maxine Fantroy Ford 2009 2012 David C McCalla 29 2012 2015 Cecily L Wilson Turner 30 2015 2018 Dale Getto 31 2018 Jodi M Commerford 32 See also editAlbany City School District List of high schools in New YorkReferences edit ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL National Center for Education Statistics Retrieved November 5 2018 Albany Senior High School www albanyshs wa edu au Retrieved March 31 2020 Lucas Dave November 12 2015 Voters Reject Albany High Proposal WAMC Retrieved January 12 2016 List of Schools ACSD website Archived October 17 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved July 9 2009 After 152 years Albany High has a Black valedictorian WNYT TV March 28 2021 Retrieved March 31 2021 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2008 Retrieved May 28 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Albany High School International Baccalaureate Retrieved January 26 2016 National rankings place Albany High School among top high schools in America for advanced curriculum Albany City School District press release September 24 2009 Albany school gets a favorable rating Albany Times Union September 25 2009 America s Top Public High Schools Newsweek June 8 2009 Senior Career Exploration Programs Archived October 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Commissioner Elia Identifies 144 Struggling and Persistently Struggling Schools to Begin Implementation of School Receivership in New York State New York State Education Department July 16 2015 Retrieved March 1 2016 School Receivership New York State Education Department Retrieved March 1 2016 Receivership Albany High School Retrieved March 1 2016 Albany s public schools by the numbers from Capital Education Spring 2008 AHS College Center Archived June 15 2009 at the Wayback Machine Facilities Plan Status Report Albany 2013 ALBANY HIGH SCHOOL Report Card NYSED Data Site data nysed gov a b c d e Albany schools to showcase their own hall of famers Albany Times Union August 25 2009 T amp FN World Champs Women s 100 Stats PDF trackandfieldnews com Archived from the original PDF on March 3 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 Fitzgerald Bryan April 12 2011 Long journey from Albany Gene A Cretz rose to be U S ambassador to Libya Albany Times Union Retrieved April 13 2011 Hornbeck Leigh April 23 2011 Alfred Freedman dies Albany native headed psychiatric group Albany Times Union Retrieved April 23 2011 Harsha David Addison 1891 Noted living Albanians and state officials A series of biographical sketches Albany NY Weed Parsons and Company p 237 via Archive org Archived copy Archived from the original on July 1 2017 Retrieved August 11 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Will Occupy Wall Street Upend Obama s Presidential Election New York Magazine NYMag com Retrieved January 26 2016 Larissa MacFarquhar November 3 2012 Occupy Sandy The New Yorker Retrieved January 26 2016 Sandy Storyline 2013 Tribeca Film Festival Archived November 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Housing Is a Human Right Documents Struggle For Home The Huffington Post March 18 2010 Retrieved January 26 2016 Albany City School District Press Release Retrieved July 9 2009 AHS Administration Albany High School Archived from the original on September 29 2014 Retrieved September 16 2014 Albany High principal joins district leadership team www albanyschools org Archived from the original on September 19 2015 City School District of Albany Albany High School HistoryExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Albany High School Albany New York Albany High School website Albany City School District website 42 40 01 N 73 46 58 W 42 666821 N 73 78268 W 42 666821 73 78268 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albany High School New York amp oldid 1212250111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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