Olympic Community of Schools is located in Charlotte, North Carolina, and is one of 27 high schools in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (CMS) system. It joined the Essential School Coalition in 2005 with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and has been divided into 5 smaller, theme-based schools below. In early 2018 it was announced that the Olympics would be consolidated back into one high school after 13 years in the 2018-19 school year. There will still be 5 academies but with one principal and students will be able to choose courses at 5 academies.
- Faculty of Biotechnology, Health, and Public Administration in Olympic (Biotech)
- Faculty of Entrepreneurship & amp; Advanced Manufacturing at the Olympics (TIM)
- School of Math, Engineering, Technology and Science at the Olympics (METS)
- Renaissance School of Art and Technology in Olympic (Renaissance)
- School of Executive Leadership & amp; Entrepreneurship Development (ELED)
Used School
- School of International Business and Communication Studies at Olympic (Business)
- School of International Studies and the Global Economy at the Olympics (Global)
Although the name change has been official, it's still commonly referred to by its previous name, Olympic High School .
Video Olympic Community of Schools
Administration/Faculty
Olympic High currently has five principals and two principal assistants.
Maps Olympic Community of Schools
Student
The Olympics is one of a handful of secondary schools in CMS that straddles the line between numbers comparable to low-performing schools, especially high-performing urban schools and schools, especially in the suburbs, and thus the student body largely reflects the district whole. By comparison, Olympic has an ethnic makeup of 44.3% Black, 34.4% White, 6.0% Asia and 1.2% Others. 14.2% were Hispanic (in the school year 2005-06). CMS demographics were 42.4% Black, 36.2% White 4.3% Asian, 13.6% Hispanic and 3.5% Others. The graduation rate on the North Carolina End-of-Course 2006-07 test, used for the sample knowledge and mastery of subjects that most students take as college students, was 63.2%, near the CMS average of 65.7%.
Graduation year 2006, about 300 students, received $ 2.3 million in scholarship.
Clubs and events
Athletics
The Olympic Community of Schools is a 4AA member of the North Carolina High School Athletic Association (NCHSAA) and plays at SouthMeck 8 4AA conference.
The football team has made NCHSAA's Playoffs in the following years: 1970, 1991, 1993 (Round 2), 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002 (First Round), 2003 (First Round), 2004 (First Round), 2005 (first round), 2006 (Round 2), 2008 (2nd Round), and 2009. The best season of the Olympics was in 1970 when they finished 10-3, losing 14-0 from Raleigh High School Needham B. Broughton in 4A country championship game. The Olympics have only 3 seasons of 10 wins, in 1970, 1993 and 2006, completing 10-3 each year. The Trojans recently won the 2009 MEGA-7 4A/3A Conference. Coach Ty Baumgardner brings the high school Olympic basketball team to the 4A nation championship in 2013. The Olympics finished perfectly 30-0 this season. Olympic entered the No. 1 game. 4 nationally by MaxPreps.
Program
Olympic's US Army JROTC has a gold star "honor unit with a difference", which has been held for 25 consecutive years. The gold star is worn by the students, and is the highest honor that JROTC High school can earn. It was received when 95% or more was given in what is known as the Formal Annual Inspection (AFI), which audited various areas of the JROTC program, and was carried out by a group of officers sent by the Army. It also won a fourth in the Superintendent Cup, which was awarded to 5 JROTC units with the highest overall combined score of the competition this year.
The Olympic Trojan Marching Band supports the university football team in its game, and competes regularly with other schools in CMS and across the region. It has been known to place well in this competition despite the smaller marching band. As a subgroup of the marching band, the Olympic High School Winds performed throughout the winter and spring ended their season with the World Winter Guard International final in Dayton, Ohio.
Small School
The small school conversion started with grant security in 2005 from the Small School Coalition Schools Important School (CES) Project, a 5-year initiative supported by the Gates Foundation education body. An initial $ 305,000 is accepted for planning. This planning process involves 5 teacher committees, parents, and students who specify each school for no more than 400 students, such as which theme and which part of the Olympic campus it will occupy. The appointment of principals and visits to other CES affiliate schools across the country are also discussed. The results are presented at the end of the school year 05-06 to CES for an additional $ 1.3 million for the next two years.
The students, initially skeptical and unwilling to be separated from friends, have liked the more intimate Olympic atmosphere that has given the principals to know them by name. But there are some challenges, such as building a communication channel between 5 schools.
Critics say the small school movement is new, and some schools have produced long-term academic results. They also stressed the importance of reforms not stopping at smaller settings. For example, public courses encouraged by multiple-choice tests are replaced with challenging projects related to real-life results. This involves a certain level of experimentation and creativity that can be hobbled by the district mandate, too many teachers relying on routine, budgetary, and test driven culture institutionalized by a series of local and national achievement tests. There are some successes with project-based learning in Olympic, especially with 1,150 square feet (107 m 2 ), three bedrooms Habitat for Humanity house for a family in northwest Charlotte built on a school property by development students continued at the Olympic METS school, with $ 70,000 required for projects raised in part by students at business schools.
Most agree that confronting obstacles in the Olympics will require tremendous leadership and a leap of faith by all parties involved. There is a marked increase in parental and community engagement. For example, attendance for athletics events in 2006-07 was the highest since 1982, and multi-million-dollar campaigns were initiated by parents and community members for facility improvements. The latest incarnation of this fundraiser is the Olympic High School Foundation, which collects $ 276,500 by 2015. Hope, such enthusiasm can be maintained and even grow as the success of the Olympics is measured in the coming years.
Future
CMS can build a new high school near The Palisades in the coming years. Former school principal Pamela Espinosa and others worry that it can lead to "owning and not attending school". They say that they instead hope that innovation and pride will lead the school into an exciting future.
References
External links
- Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Homepage
- CES Small School Project Overview
- High School Foundation
Source of the article : Wikipedia