Fossil Ridge High School | |
Motto: | Sko Ridge! |
Address: | 5400 Ziegler Road |
City: | Fort Collins, Colorado |
Zipcode: | 80528 |
Country: | United States |
Coordinates: | 40.5139°N -105.0156°W |
Type: | Public high school |
District: | Poudre School District |
Principal: | Mark Barry |
Ceeb: | 060606 |
Grades: | 9-12 |
Athletics: | Division 5A |
Mascot: | SaberCat[1] |
Students: | 2,053 (2022–23)[2] |
Ratio: | 20.36 |
Staff: | 100.82 (FTE) |
Colors: | Green, silver, black |
Fossil Ridge High School is the newest of four public high schools in Fort Collins, Colorado, United States.
Voters approved the opening of Fossil Ridge High School in 2000, and the school first opened to students in August 2004 with 475 students in grades 10 and 11. It was intended to help better distribute students in Fort Collins and alleviate pressure on Rocky Mountain High School.
Fossil Ridge High School participates in the 5A Front Range League.
The boys' swim team won state championships in 2015, 2016 and 2017[3] while head coach Mark Morehouse was awarded National High School Coach of the Year honors by the National High School Coaches Association following the 2016 championship win.[4] The girls' swim team won state championships in 2011-12, 2014–15, and again in 2016-17.
The cheerleading program consists of a freshman team, a junior varsity team and a varsity team. The Fossil Ridge Cheer team won the 2019 Varsity National Championship. The junior varsity team won CSCA State in 2017 in All-girl and in 2018 as Co-ed. The varsity team won the 2001 and 2002 Front Range League competition for the fifth consecutive year holding the title from 2014 to 2018. The junior varsity team placed 7th place at the high school national championship in 2019.
Fossil Ridge High School has a unified sports program, which pairs students with and without disabilities together on teams.[5] Fossil Ridge High School was named the 2015 Project Unify School of the year by the Colorado Special Olympics.[6] [7]
Fossil Ridge was the first high school in Fort Collins to begin a unified basketball team. It was the first school to host the Special Olympics track and field event for students from Poudre and Thompson School Districts, and the first to host the local Special Olympics flag football tournament.[8]
The marching band at Fossil Ridge won the state championships in 2012, 2013, 2018, 2019, 2022 and 2023.[9] and took second place in 2014,[10] 2015,[11] 2016, 2017 and 2021.
Fossil Ridge's Knowledge Bowl team won the Colorado state title in 2012 and 2013. The team took second place in the state in the interscholastic academic competition in 2014,[12] and claimed the state title again in 2015 and 2016.[13]
The school's monthly newspaper, Etched In Stone, won the Colorado High School Press Association's 2012 Best In Show: Website Award, as well as the National Scholastic Press Association's Pacemaker Finalist Award.
The school's Improv team ranked first in the state in the International Thespian Society's state conferences in 2015 and 2016.
The head of the film program at Fossil Ridge High School is teacher Brendan Gallagher. Projects include the triennial Lip dubs, the 2013 Ridge Life Movie, and the 2014 Moment in Time project.
Students in Ridge TV learn editing and sound production software, professional production skills, and develop segments for a weekly school-wide broadcast. Students create, over the course of the year, short films in the SaberCats Studios that are premiered in the annual FOASS (Films on a Shoe String) film festival. Students then move on to compete in the Fort Collins High School Film Festival,[14] viewed by the general public at the Lyric Theater in Fort Collins.
Fossil Ridge High School was the first Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) high school in Colorado. The building was constructed out of environmentally friendly materials and has double-pane windows and solar panels. The school also has energy-efficient lighting, heating and cooling systems, and sustainable landscape design.[15]
As a result of its design, Fossil Ridge's energy savings are about 60 percent. The school saves approximately $100,000 a year in utilities.[16] The Discovery Channel hosted a special, highlighting energy saving at the school and its importance in modern society.