Big Spring High School
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Big Spring High School | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
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707 E 11th Place , 79720-4648 United States | |
| Coordinates | 32°14′50″N 101°27′57″W / 32.2471752°N 101.4658803°W |
| Information | |
| School type | Public high school |
| Opened | March 23, 1952 |
| School district | Big Spring Independent School District |
| Principal | Mike Ritchey |
| Staff | 87.60 (FTE)[1] |
| Grades | 9–12 |
| Enrollment | 1,044 (2023–2024)[1] |
| Student to teacher ratio | 11.92[1] |
| Colors | Black & Gold |
| Athletics conference | UIL Class AAAA |
| Mascot | Steers/Lady Steers |
| Website | Big Spring High School |
Big Spring High School is a public high school located in Big Spring, Texas, and classified as a 4A Division I school by the University Interscholastic League (UIL). It is part of the Big Spring Independent School District located in north central Howard County. The high school building was dedicated on March 23, 1952. The dedication address was given by J.W. Edgar, State Commissioner of Education. This was the first new high school built in 35 years, and the third in the district's history.[2] In 2015, the school was rated "Met Standard" by the Texas Education Agency.[3][needs update?]
The Big Spring Steers compete in the following UIL academic events. Events below have both team and individual components unless specifically noted otherwise. Sanctioned high school academic events are:
- Accounting
- Calculator applications
- Computer applications (individual competition only)
- Computer science
- Congressional debate
- Current issues and events
- Literary criticism
- Mathematics
- Number sense
- Ready writing (individual competition only)
- Science
- Social studies
- Spelling and vocabulary
- Speech (an award is given to the top overall school in speech events; the award does not qualify students for advancement)
- Cross-examination team debate (team competition only)
- Lincoln-Douglas debate (individual competition only)
- Extemporaneous speaking (individual competition only)
- Poetry interpretation (individual competition only)
- Prose interpretation (individual competition only)
- Congressional debate
- Journalism (an award is given to the top overall school in journalism events; the award does not qualify students for advancement)
- Editorial writing (individual competition only)
- Feature writing (individual competition only)
- Headline writing (individual competition only)
- News writing (individual competition only)
- One act play (team competition plus individual awards that do not lead to advancement)
UIL academic state meet
State titles
Individual
- Calculator applications[4]
- 2022 (4A), 2023 (4A)
- Congressional debate[5]
- 2016 (4A), 2024 (4A)
- Editorial writing[6]
- 1990(4A)
- Feature writing[7]
- 2008(4A)
- Lincoln-Douglas debate[8]
- Mathematics[4]
- 2022 (4A)
- News writing[11]
- 1990,[12] 2009(4A)
- Number sense[13]
- 2009(4A)
- Persuasive speaking[14]
- 2011(3A)
- Prose interpretation[15]
- 1978(4A), 1979(4A)
- Spelling[16]
- 1977(4A), 2001(4A), 2023 (4A)
- Typing[17]
- 1948(2A)
Team
Other state placings
- 1947
- 3rd place Shorthand
- 1990
- 2nd place News Writing
- 2002
- Octa-finalists: cross-examination debate
- 2003
- 3rd place persuasive extemporaneous speaking
- 2004
- 2nd place Persuasive Extemporaneous Speaking
- 2nd place: Headline Writing
- 2nd place: News Writing
- 3rd place: Lincoln-Douglas Debate
- 4th place: News Writing
- 6th place Informative Extemporaneous Speaking
- 2005
- 3rd place Persuasive Extemporaneous Speaking
- 3rd place: Feature Writing
- 6th place Poetry Interpretation
- 2006
- Quarter-finalists: cross-examination debate
- 2009
- 2nd place: Feature Writing
- 3rd place: Headline Writing
- 3rd place: Literary Criticism
- 2010
- 3rd place Persuasive Extemporaneous Speaking
- Octa-finalists: cross-examination debate
- 2012
- 2014
- 2015
- 2016
- 2017
- 2019
- 2021
- 2022
- 2023
- 5th place Congress 4A
- Octa-finalists Cross Examination State Meet 4A
- 4th place Speaker Cross-Examination
- 2nd place LD Debate 4A
- 2nd place Mathematics 4A
- 2nd place Science 4A
- 2nd place News Writing 4A
- 3rd place Persuasive Speaking 4A
- 4th place Number Sense 4A
- 5th place Informative Speaking 4A
- 2nd place Science Team 4A
- 3rd place Speech & Debate Team 4A
- 3rd place Spelling Team 4A
- 2024
- 2026
Athletics
The Big Spring Steers compete in these sports: cross country, volleyball, football, basketball, powerlifting, swimming, golf, tennis, track, softball & baseball.[19]
The school competes in class 4A in all sports except for swimming and diving which competes in class 5A
State titles
Team
- Boys cross country[20]
- 2006(4A)
Individual
- Boys triple jump[21]
- 2010(4A)
- Girls long jump[22]
- 2011(3A)
- Boys 800 meter[23]
- 2016 (4A)
- Boys 800 meter[23]
- 2017 (4A)
- Girls triple jump[23]
- 2017 (4A)
State finalists
State semi-finalists
- Volleyball[26]
- 2013 (3A)
Other state placings
- 2011(3A)
- 2nd place girls long jump
- 2nd place boys long jump
- 2nd place girls 400 relay
- 2nd place girls 800 relay
- 3rd place triple jump
- Girls track 2nd place team[27]
- 2012(3A)
- 9th place boys powerlifting SHW
- 2017 (4A)
- 2nd place boys 1600 relay
- 4th place boys 400 meter
- 5th place boys 300 hurdles
- 6th place boys 400 relay
- 6th place boys 800 relay
- 4th place girls 400 meter
- 4th place girls discus
2021 (4A)
- 4th place boys discus
2022(4A D1)
- 7th Place Boys powerlifting 123
- 7th Place Girls powerlifting 132
- 7th Place Girls Powerlifting 220
- 8th Place Girls Powerlifting 259+
- 2nd Place Girls Powerlifting 259
2023(4A D1)
- 5th Place Girls Powerlifting 220
- 4th Place Girls Powerlifting 259+
- 2nd Place Girls Powerlifting 259+
