W. B. Ray High School Explained

W. B. Ray High School
Streetaddress:1002 Texan Trail
City:Corpus Christi
State:Texas
Country:United States
Type:Public, Secondary
Established:1950
Principal:Roxanne Gonzalez Cuevas
Faculty:96.66 (FTE)
Ratio:16.97
Grades:9–12
Enrollment:1,640 (2022-23)[1]
Mascot:Tex and Mary Lou
Yearbook:Silver Spur
Head Name:Second Master
Head Name2:Assistant Headmaster
Colors:Scarlet & Silver
Free Label:Emblem

W. B. Ray High School is a 5A secondary school centrally located in Corpus Christi, Texas, United States, and is part of the Corpus Christi Independent School District. The school is named in honor of CCISD school board president, William Benton Ray. W. B. Ray High School opened in 1950. Ray High School is noted for its Socratic method, a system based on teacher and student interaction that promulgates discussion and inquiry-based learning in the classroom.

W. B. Ray High School one of 46 high schools in Texas designated as a World School by the International Baccalaureate Programme. W. B. Ray High School is the only high school in CCISD which offers the International Baccalaureate Program and is the district's only program for Gifted and Talented students at the high school level, offering higher level academic courses that surpass Honors and AP courses in both rigor and difficulty.

Demographics

With a student enrollment of approximately 2,100 students, Ray High School has an ethnic distribution of 62% Hispanic, 32% White, 5% Black, & 1% other (including Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, and Asians). The school's boundary area is varied in socioeconomic strata, ranging from extremely affluent multi-million-dollar homes to multi-family complexes.

Profile

The school principal is Roxanne Cuevas.

The school's motto is "Fighting Texans." The mascots are "Tex" and "Mary Lou."

International Baccalaureate

Ray's International Baccalaureate program graduated its inaugural class in 2013. Since then, graduates have been accepted for admission at some of the most prestigious academic institutions and programs in the world including Harvard, MIT, Yale, Columbia, Georgetown, NYU, Vanderbilt, Cornell, Brown, Northwestern, Tufts, Washington University in St. Louis, Stanford, Rice, Duke, the American University in Paris, SNHU, University of Notre Dame, and Dartmouth among others.

Extracurricular involvement

Ray High School participates in a variety of extracurricular activities. Clubs and organizations are available in academics, service, performing arts, publications, and special interests. Competitive sports for young men and women include basketball, baseball, track, soccer, softball, wrestling, football, cross-country, swimming and diving, golf, volleyball, tennis, and recently water polo. The school's award-winning Academic Decathlon and Mock Trial teams regularly advance to the state level. The Ray Speech and Debate team is a regional powerhouse and a frequent competitor at prominent national contests, such as NIETOC, NSDA, and Tournament of Champions. Additionally, the Speech and Debate team is recognized on the state level by the Texas Forensic Association, and has had a student compete for Team USA in Debate.[2]

School uniform

This school has a simple dress code: any color shirt and pants, but can not be showing (stomach, etc.) anything. Assistant principals and armed police officers guard the main hallways in search of dress code offenders. In 2000, there was a push in the administration (led by Dr. Scott at the time) to ban flip-flops, but student and parent outcry and lack of support from teachers led to this being dropped.

Athletics

Notable alumni

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: RAY H S. National Center for Education Statistics. March 17, 2024.
  2. Web site: Camarillo . Vicky . Ray High School student selected for national debate team . 2024-04-29 . Corpus Christi Caller-Times . en-US.
  3. Web site: League. University Interscholastic. Track & Field Historical Archives — University Interscholastic League (UIL). 2021-12-31. www.uiltexas.org. en.
  4. Web site: Football State Archives.
  5. "Bob Creech," in Jim Gallagher (ed.), 1972 Philadelphia Eagles Media Guide. Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Eagles Football Club, 1972, p. 19.
  6. "Wine Matters; Brewery exec turned to wine." San Antonio Express-News. August 2, 2006.