Suncoast Community High School | |
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Address | |
1717 Avenue S Riviera Beach, Florida, Palm Beach 33404 United States Of America |
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Coordinates | 26°27′05″N 80°03′43″W / 26.4515°N 80.0620°WCoordinates: 26°27′05″N 80°03′43″W / 26.4515°N 80.0620°W |
Information | |
Funding type | Public |
Motto | We are the World |
Established | 1955 |
School district | Palm Beach County School District |
Principal | Karen Whetsell |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 1415 |
Color(s) | Green and Gold |
Athletics | Baseball, Softball, Football, Volleyball, Track and Field, Swimming |
Mascot | Chargers |
Team name | Chargers |
Publication | Syzygy, literary magazine |
Newspaper | The Legend |
Yearbook | Renaissance |
Communities served | Palm Beach County Magnet School |
Band | The Chargersonic Sound |
Founded as | Riviera Beach High School |
Accreditation |
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools |
Website | www |
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
Florida Department of Education
International Baccalaureate
National Association for College Admission Counseling
Suncoast Community High School is a public magnet high school (grades 9-12) in Riviera Beach, Florida. The school's campus was built in 1955 as Riviera Beach High School. It was desegregated in the 1960s and renamed in 1970. It became a magnet school in 1989 and has selective admissions.
Students at Suncoast belong to one or more of the school's four magnet programs: Math, Science, and Engineering (MSE), Computer Science (CS), International Baccalaureate (IB), or the Innovative Interactive Technology Program (IIT). The school's teams compete as the Chargers.
Suncoast's campus was built in 1955 as Riviera Beach High School. During the 1950s and 1960s, Riviera Beach High School was known for both its academics and its athletics. The Riviera Beach High Hornets were particularly strong in men's basketball, with games against rival Palm Beach High School routinely drawing packed crowds.
In 1989 Suncoast, along with Atlantic High in Delray Beach and S.D. Spady Elementary School, became a magnet school. The institution of magnet programs was originally opposed by several black organizations and some teachers' unions. The principal at the time was Kay Carnes, who remained Suncoast's principal for 15 years before stepping down at the end of the 2004 school year.
Suncoast students and prospective students were required to apply in late spring, and minimum GPA and new dress code were adopted.