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Highland Park Community High School

Highland Park Community High School
Address
15900 Woodward Ave., Highland Park, MI 48203
Highland Park, Michigan, Michigan
United States
Coordinates 42°24′45″N 83°06′01″W / 42.4126°N 83.1002°W / 42.4126; -83.1002Coordinates: 42°24′45″N 83°06′01″W / 42.4126°N 83.1002°W / 42.4126; -83.1002
Information
Type Public High School
Motto "Striving for Excellence; Learning for Life"
Established Early 1900s
School district Highland Park Schools
Principal Mr. Belvin Liles
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 775 (approx.)
Campus Urban
Color(s) Blue and White
Mascot Polar Bears
Accreditation North Central Association
Affiliation Independent

Highland Park Community High School (often known as Highland Park High School) was a public high school in Highland Park, Michigan. About 775 students attended Highland Park in about 2012. Its mascot is the polar bears, and its school colors are blue and white. It was a part of Highland Park Schools, but had been operated as a charter school by Leona Group as the Highland Park Renaissance High School from August 2012, until the end of the 2014-2015 school year, when it was scheduled to close.

The current Highland Park High School was built in 1977 to better accommodate students than the old facility had. In the 1970s Highland Park lost over 20% of its population. The previous high school building was closed in 1978 so the students could attend classes at the new building.

The high school had direct access to Highland Park Junior College (later Highland Park Community College), attracting students; Jack Martin, who later became the Detroit Public Schools emergency manager, said that the community college "was harder to get into than Wayne State." During its prime, it had graduating classes of 300 students each. Students continued to enroll despite the move of Chrysler to the suburbs. Many African-American families sent their children to the school so they could get an education comparable to that of schools in suburbs without having to move to the suburbs. The school had a pool used to train swimmers for Michigan state championships.

The school began to decline in the 1990s. The student population decreased and academic programs and after school activities decreased. The community college closed in 1996. The school pool closed during that decade. In 2000 the school district began operating on a deficit. In a five-year period before 2012, enrollment plummeted, with 450 students in 2012.

When Martin visited the school he encountered many empty and unused classrooms and various kinds of damage and wear, including water damage, exposed concrete beams, missing and falling ceiling panels, and exposed wiring. Doors had knocked out glass panels and missing doorknobs. Some lockers had fire damage because students had set the lockers on fire. The school budget did not have sufficient finances to fix all of the damage.


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