Atascocita High School | |
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Atascocita High School
"Learning for life through rigor, relevance, and relationships."
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Address | |
13300 Will Clayton Parkway Humble, Texas, Harris County 77346 United States |
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Coordinates | 29°58′46″N 95°10′17″W / 29.979553°N 95.171278°WCoordinates: 29°58′46″N 95°10′17″W / 29.979553°N 95.171278°W |
Information | |
Funding type | Public |
Opened | 2006 |
School district | Humble Independent School District |
Superintendent | Dr. Elizabeth Celania-Fagen |
Principal | Bill Daniels |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 4,590 |
Student to teacher ratio | 14.7:1 |
Campus | Suburban |
Houses | Red, White, Blue and Gold |
School colour(s) | Red, white, and blue |
Mascot | Eagle |
Nickname | The A |
Rivals | Kingwood High School |
Average SAT scores | 1620 |
Average ACT scores | 24 |
Newspaper | The Talon |
Yearbook | The Aerie |
Website | www |
Atascocita High School is a secondary school located in Atascocita CDP, a community housed in unincorporated Harris County, Texas, United States. AHS is a part of Humble Independent School District and serves the eastern part of the district and small portions of the city of Houston.
AHS opened in August 2006, becoming the district's third traditional high school, and the first opened since 1979. Since its opening, it has been the district's largest high school in terms of enrollment.
After there was a substantial amount of growth in the Atascocita and Lake Houston portions of Humble ISD,Humble High School became hugely overcrowded, reaching an enrollment of nearly 5,000 students. The district opened Atascocita High School in August 2006 to address the problem.
From its opening, AHS dealt with its own overcrowding problem. During its second year of operation, the campus installed temporary trailer classrooms in one of the parking lots. The following year, a new wing on the east side of the campus was built, the cafeteria was expanded, and the temporary buildings were removed. Finally in 2009, the district opened Summer Creek High School to serve the large Fall Creek and Summerwood subdivisions. Recently, AHS has again begun to experience an overcrowding issue. During the 2015-2016 school year, it built temporary trailer classrooms again in the parking lot of one of the houses to make room for the influx of students.
The campus was originally designed around three communities named after the school's colors: Red, White, and Blue. Each community was divided into two houses: Red 1 and 2, White 1 and 2, Blue 1 and 2. After the school's overcrowding issues, a fourth community, the Gold Community, was added onto the east side of campus. Currently, freshmen attend classes in the Gold Community, while the upperclassmen are equally dispersed across the other three communities.
The idea behind the house system is to have students attend their classes within their houses, providing a smaller environment for students in a large high school. Each house is served by a counselor and an assistant principal. Each house is centered on a "flex area" and shares an LGI (large group instruction), a collegiate-style lecture hall, with its adjacent house.
After AHS became the first high school in the district to use the house system on such a large scale, Humble ISD renovated its two other high schools (Humble and Kingwood) with the house system, and later opened Kingwood Park and Summer Creek high schools with the house system design.