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HISTORY AND
CHARACTERISTICS OF NHS
Northside High School (NHS), located in the northern
section of Roanoke County, Virginia, first opened in December, 1960. Since
that time, the surrounding area and the student body have changed
considerably. Although still somewhat rural in some areas, this section of
the county has become more commercialized and industrialized. New homes,
subdivisions of single-and multi-family dwellings, and apartment complexes
have also been built during this time. The extensions of I-81 and most
recently Peters Creek Road have made this part of the county accessible. As
the area has grown, the population has become more diverse and the
socioeconomic level has risen.
NHS is located near Roanoke
City, Salem City and the town of Vinton. The immediate area offers numerous
educational, cultural, recreational, and civic opportunities. The Roanoke
Valley has six diverse colleges and an university as well as centers for
bachelors and masters programs from colleges and universities throughout the
state. Several acting and musical groups, amateur and professional, perform
in their own theaters, and a fine arts center is located in the historic
City Market of Roanoke City. Several museums in the area celebrate such
diverse subjects as transportation and African-American history. The
Explore Park off the Blue Ridge Parkway offers visitors a “living history”
of the era during colonial times. The area’s ice hockey, football, soccer,
basketball and baseball teams play in the area, and several private and
public golf courses are available. Although boating and fishing on a
limited basis are available at Carvins Cove and on the Roanoke River,
extensive recreational opportunities exist at nearby Smith Mountain Lake.
The Parkway and the Appalachian Trail also provide scenic locations for
outdoor activities. An airport, several shopping centers, two regional
hospital systems, and even a small zoo also serve the valley.
NHS is one of five high
schools in the Roanoke County School System. William Byrd High School is
located in Vinton, Glenvar High School services the area west of Salem,
while Southwest County is the home to Cave Spring and Hidden Valley High
Schools.
Initially, the original
student body of NHS consisted of grades seven through ten with students
coming from William Byrd High School and Andrew Lewis High School, now part
of the Salem school system. In 1962, the student body was comprised of
grades eight through twelve. The Class of 1963 had the honor of being the
first graduating class of NHS. When Northside Intermediate School opened in
1970, the eighth grade remained at the intermediate school, leaving the high
school with grades nine through ten. In 1973, the ninth grade remained at
the intermediate school, which then became a junior high, and NHS became a
senior high school. In 1977, Roanoke City annexed a portion of north
county, reducing NHS’s enrollment, which has remained fairly stable at each
grade level in recent years with a graduating class of 240 to 270. In 1994,
the junior high became a middle school with NHS once again having grades
nine through twelve. Today students from Glen Cove, Burlington, Mountain
View, and Mason’s Cove Elementary Schools attend Northside Middle School
prior to coming to NHS.
As the population has
changed, the building has aged, and the educational needs of the student
body have increased, NHS has undergone several expansions. Because of the
initial rapid growth in the school population, the back wing was added in
1965-66. The auxiliary gym was completed during the 1985-86 school year,
and E-Hall was added in 1994 to accommodate the conversion of the junior
high into a middle school and to provide facilities for the students with
special needs. Although school bus transportation is available for all
students, many drive, making the addition of the senior parking lot in 1994
much needed. A gym facility for the use of both the middle and high schools
was built in 1997.
In addition to course offerings at NHS, students may also take
courses at the Arnold R. Burton Technology Center, the Roanoke Valley
Governor’s School for Science and Technology, and other county schools,
which offer courses, such as AP Art, not available at NHS. Several courses
are a part of the electronic classroom program, which allows students at all
five high schools to take the courses simultaneously with the same
instructors. Students may also enroll in several courses offered in the
high school for dual credit in conjunction with Virginia Western Community
College, and some students are taking courses on the actual community
college campus or on-line with the college. Students may also take
advantage of special options such as attending the Roanoke County Career
Center or attending adult-education night classes to obtain a GED. Students
may be graduated with Standard, Modified Standard, Advanced Studies, or
Individual Educational Plan (IEP) diplomas. Prior to registration, students
receive a registration guide outlining all courses and prerequisites and the
state requirements for the Standard and Advanced Studies diplomas.
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