- Source: Neuqua Valley High School
Neuqua Valley High School (NVHS) /ˈniːkwə/ is a public four-year high school located near the corner of Illinois Route 59 and 95th Street in Naperville, Illinois, a western suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. Neuqua Valley is the counterpart to Waubonsie Valley High School and Metea Valley High School, in Indian Prairie School District 204. Classrooms can be rented for other district approved teachers to use after school.
History
The campus consists of two locations. The Birkett Freshman Center building houses freshmen. The Main Campus, the original building, houses sophomores, juniors, and seniors.
The original Neuqua Valley campus building was opened in August 1997, and was built to house 3000 students. The school cost $63 million to build, which at the time was the most expensive high school in Illinois, and was the largest high school built in the state in nearly eighty years. The school is named after Neaqua, a Potawatomi, and son of Waubonsie.
Starting with the 2003–2004 academic year, the nearby middle school (Crone Middle School) was converted to house the freshman class in an effort to alleviate overcrowding. From that point on, the freshmen attended class at the Freshman Center, and the Main Campus housed only the sophomore, junior, and senior classes. A third building that was completed around 2007, the Frontier Campus, allowed seniors to receive dual credit for classes from the College of DuPage. These students attended class in block sessions with no classes on Friday. It allowed for independence and freedom. Seniors from Waubonsie Valley High School also participated in the program. The Frontier Campus option was closed in 2012.
The lake behind the school is known as "Lake Birkett", in honor of the school's first principal, Kathryn Birkett, also the namesake of the Freshman Campus building, in honor of her service as district superintendent until 2014.
Neuqua Valley was designed by the architecture firm ATS&R. The design is based on one of the firm's prior projects in Minnesota. The firm used the design again for a high school in Pennsylvania that opened in 1999.
In September 2017, Neuqua Valley became the first high school in District 204 to be named a National Blue Ribbon School.
Demographics
In the 2022-2023 school year, the school had an enrollment of 3,156 students. 45.2% of students identified as non-Hispanic white, 37.1% of students identified as Asian, 7.3% identified as Hispanic or Latino, 5.8% identified as black or African-American, 4.7% identified as multiracial, and 0.2% identified as Native American or Pacific Islander.
Academics
In 2011, Neuqua Valley had an average composite ACT score of 25.2, and graduated 99.1% of its senior class.
In 2013, US News ranked Neuqua Valley 563rd in their annual list of the top American public high schools. However, Neuqua Valley has not met federal education standards under the No Child Left Behind law.
In November 2011, Neuqua Valley High School was ranked 11th in the "Top 50 High Schools in Chicagoland" by the Chicago Tribune and was the top ranked high school in Naperville, Illinois.
The Main Campus, the original building, is divided into five wings, A-E. The A wing contains Neuqua's Fine and Applied Arts, as well as industrial and consumer education classrooms and facilities. The B wing contains History, English and Health classrooms. The C wing contains Science classrooms complete with lab equipment and also television production studios. This wing also includes the library. The D wing contains Math, Computer Science, Foreign Language, Special Education (SPED) and Business classrooms. The E wing contains the cafeteria and Physical Education facilities and the staff room. The Birkett Freshman Center (BFC) has 3 pseudo-wings G, H, and J. The G wing holds the commons, all business classes for freshman, the physical education rooms, and the engineering rooms. The H wing holds all special ed, the main office, the Class house, the staff lunch room, and the staff offices. The J wing holds all core academic classes, such as, Math, Science, English, Foreign Language, and Social Studies. It also includes all art rooms, and the library.
Honors
Neuqua Valley has received recognition by the Grammy Association for its music program. The school was named a GRAMMY signature school in 1998, 1999, and 2001, a GRAMMY signature school Gold in 2000, 2003, 2004, and 2009, and the National GRAMMY Signature school "Best in Nation" in 2005 and 2013. The Music Department homepage has a list of other awards. Band Director Emily Binder was recognised as the best music director in the State of Illinois of 2017.
In September 2017, Neuqua was the first high school in the area to receive the National Blue Ribbon Award under then U.S. president Donald Trump. Principal Bob McBride also received an award from Trump. This award was only given to 8 principals across the country.
Controversy
On the first day of the 2015–2016 school year, a student allegedly wore a Confederate flag, sparking a mass social media response. Yahoo! Canada published an article regarding the flag and its effect beyond Neuqua Valley High School.
Athletics
Neuqua Valley competes in the DuPage Valley Conference for athletics. The school is also a member of the Illinois High School Association (IHSA), and competes in state tournaments that it sponsors.
The school sponsors interscholastic teams for young men and women in basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball, and water polo. Young men also have teams sponsored in baseball, football, and wrestling. Women may compete in badminton, bowling, gymnastics, cheerleading, and softball.
While not sponsored by the IHSA, the school's athletic department also supports a competitive poms team, a dance team (orchesis), a rugby team, and a team which competes in and works with the Special Olympics. Outside of these teams, the school sponsors a lacrosse club, a sport recognized as an emerging sport by the IHSA. An extensive intramural program is available, competing in many sports including basketball, bowling, and even ping pong. Each fall, Neuqua participates in a women's powderpuff football tournament with Waubonsie, Metea, Naperville Central, Naperville North, and Benet Academy in Lisle. Neuqua is home to a large multi-team ultimate frisbee club, which started in 2007. The varsity team placed third in the nation in the 2012 season.
The boys' cross-country team has placed within the top 15 in the state race in Peoria every year since 2001. In 2007, the boys' cross country team won the Nike Team Nationals. The team ran under the name "Naperville XC Club" to avoid violating IHSA season limitation by-laws. They placed 12th in 2009 and 2010, and were fifth in the nation in 2016.
= State championships
=Badminton: 2014–15, 2015–16
Baseball:2006–07
Cross country (boys'): 2007–08, 2009–10, 2016–17
Dance team: 2014–15, 2015–16
Hockey: 2002–03
Soccer (boys'): 2003–04
Soccer (girls'): 2004–05
Special Olympics (basketball): 2002–2003, 2003–2004, 2004–2005, 2008–2009, 2010–2011
Swimming and diving (boys'): 2007–08
Swimming and diving (girls'): 2018–19
Track and field (boys'): 2017–18
Flag Football (boys'): 2010–11
= Marching band
=The marching band performs at all of the home football games at halftime and plays pep songs to rally the crowd during the game. The NVHS dance team dances along to the pep songs at halftime after the band's main performance. The Marching Wildcats march at the Labor Day parade and the Memorial Day parade in Downtown Naperville. The Marching Wildcats placed third at the University of Illinois Marching Band Championships two years in a row.
= Pep band
=The pep band performs at all of the home basketball games for both genders and Special Olympics. They play at organs and halftime and plays great and classic pep band songs. The Pep Band plays at 10 games through the season.
= Facilities
=The school's athletic facilities include one 8-lane, 25-yard indoor swimming pool that is 13 feet deep at the start and 9 feet deep at the turn, with a side diving well with two boards, and a small 3-lane 20-yard wading/warm-up pool. The Main Campus has three gymnasiums and a weight room. Two of these have three full-sized basketball courts each, and one is used for gymnastics. The Birkett Freshman Center has two gymnasiums, a weight room, and a rock climbing wall (given as a senior class gift in 2003). There is also a fully equipped weight room, a wrestling room, a football field enclosed by a 400-meter recycled rubber running track and a soccer stadium. The school also has more than 10 sound rooms.
Activities
The school sponsors numerous extracurricular clubs and organizations ranging from arts and academic to cultural and special interest. While an entire list can be found at nvhs.ipsd.org, the following are the most notable in terms of being chapters of a larger national movement:
Best Buddies
Business Professionals of America (BPA)
Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA)
Family, Career & Community Leaders of America (FCCLA)
Individual events (speech)
Model United Nations
Operation Snowball
Science Olympiad
Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC)
YMCA Youth and Government
Vocational Industrial Clubs of America/Skills USA (VICA)
Notable alumni
Brittany Bock – former NWSL defender, member of United States women's national soccer team
Roman Celentano – Major League Soccer goalkeeper for FC Cincinnati
Bryan Ciesiulka – former MLS midfielder
Jon Rhattigan – American football linebacker for the Seattle Seahawks
Kevin Cordes – American record holder in the 100 and 200-yard breaststrokes and 2016 Olympic gold medalist
Chris Derrick – distance runner
Patrick Doody – former MLS defender
Dwayne Evans – professional basketball player for the Hiroshima Dragonflies
Lex Fridman – Russian-American computer scientist and podcast host
Bryan Gaul – former MLS defender
Mark Gronowski – college football quarterback for the South Dakota State Jackrabbits
Keith Habersberger – internet personality, part of YouTube group The Try Guys; he played french horn as a member of the 2005 Grammy award-winning NVHS music program
Ian Krol – pitcher in the Mexican League
Evan Lysacek – 2010 Olympic gold medalist in figure skating
Babatunde Oshinowo – former NFL defensive tackle
Megan Oyster – NWSL defender for Orlando Pride
Danielle Panabaker – actress
Chris Redd – actor, comedian; former Saturday Night Live cast member
John Summit - aka John Schuster - Popular Tech House DJ
Miralem Sulejmani – midfielder for the Serbia national team
Lauren Underwood – U.S. Representative for Illinois's 14th congressional district
Lindsay Wisdom-Hylton – assistant coach for Boston College Eagles women's basketball; former WNBA forward
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Neuqua Valley High School
- Waubonsie Valley High School
- Metea Valley High School
- DuPage Valley Conference
- Valley High School
- List of high schools in Illinois
- John Summit
- Naperville, Illinois
- Indian Prairie School District 204
- Lex Fridman