Loveland High School | |
Address: | 920 West 29th Street |
Zipcode: | 80538 |
Country: | United States |
Ceeb: | 060950 |
Established: | [1] |
Grades: | 9 - 12 |
Enrollment: | 1,525 (2022-23)[2] |
Ratio: | 20.73 |
Teaching Staff: | 73.57 (FTE) |
Principal: | Shawn Collins |
Mascot: | Red Wolves |
Colors: | Red and black |
Rivals: | Mountain View Mountain Lions Thompson Valley Golden Eagles |
Loveland High School is a public high school located in Loveland, Colorado, United States. It is one of the five high schools in the Thompson R2-J School District.
Founded more than one hundred years ago, it is the oldest high school in the district. The first class of graduates left the institution in 1894, and the most recent location was opened in 1964. Before then the school was located in downtown Loveland where Bill Reed Middle School is located.[1] Loveland High School is an International Baccalaureate World School, the inaugural class of which graduated in May 2009.[3]
Enrollment size is approximately 1,600 students distributed between grades 9-12, resulting in graduating classes of approximately 400 students. According to 2022-2023 data provided by the school district, the predominant ethnicities at the school are white (70.2%), hispanic (24.0%), and multi-ethnic (3.0%).[4] The demographics of the school largely mirror the population of the city.[5]
Academic performance as measured by mean SAT composite scores in 2021 and 2022 puts Loveland High School squarely in the middle of the pack nationally, performing within 1 deviation of the mean (2022 national mean composite score = 1050, standard deviation = 216[6]).
scope=col | Year ! | scope=col | Mean SAT composite score |
---|---|---|---|
scope=row | 2021-2022 | 1025 | |
scope=row | 2022-2023 | 1019 |
For much of its history the school mascot was the Indians. In 2020, the child of the then school board president led the effort to remove the mascot and encouraged the school board to pass a resolution retiring the Indian mascot at Loveland High School and the closely related Warrior mascot at nearby Bill Reed Middle School. The driver for changing the mascot was sentiment that Native American mascots were deemed by the school board to be harmful and perpetuating of derogatory stereotypes.[7] The replacement mascot was decided on by community input and the school board unveiled the Red Wolves as the new mascot for the school on October 7, 2020.[8] The school colors remained the same red and black as they had been before the mascot change. Many of the current students, and the local community, are unhappy with the change, as the majority did not previously see any problem with the original mascot.