Chesapeake High School (Pasadena, Maryland) Explained

Chesapeake High School
Address:4798 Mountain Road
City:Pasadena
State:Maryland
Country:United States
Coordinates:39.1106°N -76.4619°W
District:Anne Arundel County Public Schools
Type:Public high school
Principal:John Yore
Teaching Staff:82.15 FTE (2022-23)
Grades:9–12
Gender:Co-educational
Enrollment:1,419 (2022-23)
Ratio:17.27 (2022-23)
Campus:Suburban
Colors:School: Blue and gold

Athletics: Carolina blue, navy blue, and white
Mascot:Cougar
Rival:Northeast High School

Chesapeake High School (CHS) is a public high school in Pasadena, Maryland. It is one of two public high schools in Pasadena, the other being Northeast High School.

The school serves grades 9–12 in the local feeder system, encompassing Chesapeake Bay Middle School and the respective five elementary schools that feed into it. The school has two floors and includes a football field, several soccer and other athletic fields, and a variety of gymnasiums, including a smaller dance studio.

History

Before Chesapeake High School was opened, Northeast High School was the only high school in Pasadena. By the 1970's, overcrowing had become a large enough problem at Northeast to warrant the of establishment a second high school in the town. Chesapeake High School was opened in 1976, bisecting Pasadena's high school enrollment.

In October 2007, Chesapeake High School was listed as one of four high schools in Anne Arundel County that had outbreaks of staph infections. Twenty-eight cases of the infection have also been reported at Severna Park High School, Glen Burnie High School, and Old Mill High School.[1]

In February 2008, Chesapeake parents began an organization (CEEDSS) to protest a special education program, known as CRP or the Chesapeake Regional Program, that has been in the school since 1990, but according to parents has been disruptive to education and concealed by administration.[2]

Students

Chesapeake High School's feeder area is the same as Chesapeake Bay Middle School's, since there is no other nearby middle school. The feeder elementary schools are Lake Shore, Pasadena, Bodkin, and Fort Smallwood. In addition to including the entire Lake Shore region of Pasadena, Chesapeake's attendance area also covers Gibson Island and the Riverdale neighborhood within Severna Park. During the 2019–2020 school year, the racial makeup of Chesapeake High School's 1,388 students was 83.6% white, 5.9% Hispanic, 4.1% Black or African American, 1.9% Asian, and 3.9% two or more races. 14% of students qualified for free and reduced meals.[3]

Academic programs

Athletics

Sports teams at Chesapeake, with both varsity and junior varsity teams, are all part of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association. They include:

Chesapeake has won several state championships including two baseball (1997 and 2014), seven softball (1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 2007 and 2008), three wrestling (1981, 2000, and 2002), one marching band (2019) and one soccer championship (1998).[4]

Notable alumni

Notes and References

  1. http://wbal.com/news/story.asp?articleid=64146 WBAL News
  2. http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/readne/2008/02_11-30/TOP The Capital
  3. Web site: Chesapeake High (2273) . Districts & Schools . Maryland Department of Education . 2020.
  4. Arundel Voice Web site: County Schools: The State Championship Breakdown. 2016-08-11. https://web.archive.org/web/20160919022147/http://www.arundelvoice.com/sports/county-schools-state-championship-breakdown. 2016-09-19. dead.
  5. Web site: Chesapeake grad becomes city police commissioner. Maryland Gazette. February 17, 2024.
  6. Web site: Miss New York's Md. Upbringing raises eyebrows; Pageant: A few folks say she's 'carpetbagging,' but Pasadena native Brandi Burkhardt followed every rule, representing the state in which she has residency . 30 September 1999 .
  7. Web site: Lauren Gibson. CBS Interactive Tennessee Softball. 27 September 2013.
  8. Web site: Nic Kipke. Maryland State Archives. 27 September 2013.
  9. Web site: Victoria L. Schade. Maryland State Archives. 27 September 2013.