Land O' Lakes High School | |
Established: | July 3, 1975 |
Principal: | Ric Mellin |
Head Name: | Second Master |
Head Name2: | Assistant Headmaster |
Teaching Staff: | 96.40 (FTE) |
Ratio: | 23.32 |
Enrollment: | 2,248 (2022–23)[1] |
Grades: | 9-12 |
Streetaddress: | 20325 Gator Lane |
City: | Land O' Lakes |
State: | Florida |
Country: | USA |
District: | Pasco County |
Athletics: | Baseball, boys' and girls' basketball, cheerleading, cross-country, football, boys' and girls' golf, boys' and girls' soccer, varsity softball, boys' and girls' swimming & diving, boys' and girls' tennis, boys' and girls' track, varsity volleyball, boys' and girls' weightlifting, varsity wrestling, boys hockey, boys' and girlsl lacrosse |
Nickname: | Lando |
Mascot: | Fighting Gator |
Rival: | Sunlake High School |
Yearbook: | Alligate |
Land O' Lakes High School (LOLHS) is a four-year public high school in Land O' Lakes, Florida.[2] It is a part of the Pasco County Schools District in Pasco County. The school mascot is the Fighting Gators.[3]
Construction of Land O' Lakes High School began in 1973.[4] Leroy McClain was named principal and began hiring staff. Because of critical overcrowding across the county due to a population jump, classes were held in double sessions at nearby Sanders Memorial Elementary School while the school was being built. When the school finally opened two years later, it served 1,400 students in grades 7 through 12. Five years later, Pine View Middle School was built to hold grades 6 through 8.
From 2003 to 2007, Land O' Lakes operated on a 10-period bell schedule to ease crowding with most freshmen attending classes from 10:25 AM to 4:45 PM and sophomores, juniors and seniors attending from 7:35 a.m. to 2 p.m. This was discontinued in 2007, when Sunlake High School opened.[5]
The class of 2008 was the largest in the school's history, with nearly 600 graduates.
Ric Mellin, formerly the principal of J.W. Mitchell High School, became Land O' Lakes' sixth principal in March 2009. He replaced Monica Ilse, who was appointed principal of the new Anclote High School in Holiday, Florida (opened in August 2009).[6]
In 2012, the school hosted a rally for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, which attracted 15,000 people.[7]
Name | Begin | End | |
---|---|---|---|
Leroy McClain | 1975 | 1985 | |
Albert Bashaw | 1985 | 1997 | |
Max Ramos | 1997 | 2003 | |
Ray Bonti | 2003 | 2006 | |
Monica Ilse | 2006 | 2009 | |
Ric Mellin | 2009 | Present |
In 2005, the school received a grade of A from the state of Florida for the first time. It was also the first time a high school in Pasco County received the ranking. That same year, the school was ranked as number 312 on a list of the top 1,000 high schools in the country in an issue of Newsweek magazine. In 2006 and 2007, the school kept its A grade and remained on Newsweeks annual list of the top high schools. In 2008, the school again remained on the list. The school also received an A grade for 2009.
In 2012, Land O' Lakes High School renamed its football stadium after coach John Benedetto, who led the Gators to 14 consecutive state playoffs.
In 2022 the Gymnasium was named after Coach Pahulski.
Land O' Lakes is one of two high schools in Pasco County to offer the IB Diploma Programme. High school students in Central and East Pasco attend Land o' Lakes for this program, which draws exclusive demands from teachers and students. IB is also offered at Gulf High School for students in West Pasco.[12]
In 2012 Land O' Lakes' graduation rate was 91% as compared to a statewide rate of 86.9% and a Hillsborough County rate of 86.2%.[13]
In 2007 more than 100 juniors and seniors were banned from attending prom due to an attendance policy that states that if students have more than six absences in a quarter, or ten in a semester, they will lose the privilege of participating in extracurricular activities. This is a district rule enforced by all other schools in Pasco County. Many students affected by this rule claimed that it had not been enforced before, and they had been allowed to attend homecoming, even with excessive absences. They tried to start a petition and tried to organize their own prom.[14] [15]
Nancy Browning, who was hired when the school opened in 1975, retired in 2015. She has since passed away as of July 2020. Many alumni have returned as teachers.
LOLHS houses approximately 2,265 students in grades 9 through 12.
The school was remodeled during the 2017-18 school year,[16] and renovations were completed in the 2019-2020 school year, with the school administration holding a "Grand Reopening" dedication ceremony.