Wayland High School

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Wayland High School
Established 1960
School type Public
Religious affiliation None
Principal Charles Ruopp
Enrollment 920
Location Wayland, Massachusetts, USA
Color(s) Orange/Black
Mascot The Warriors
Homepage Wayland High School, WSPN, Wayland Student Press Network

Wayland High School is a secondary school located at 264 Old Connecticut Path, in Wayland, MA; its principal is Charles P. Ruopp. The style of the high school was inspired by college campuses: there are 8 separate buildings, each dedicated to one or more general areas of study. Construction of the school was finished in 1960. As of 2006 there were 920 students, slightly above its designed operating capacity of 900.[citation needed]

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Academically, Wayland High School is an excellent school: the New England Association for Schools and Colleges Accreditation (NEASC) wrote a report about the learning atmosphere at Wayland High and said, among other things:

Wayland High School logo.

Wayland High School is an excellent high school that has set a high standard for the learning of its students, collectively and individually. Of particular note is the deeply rooted commitment to exceptionally high academic expectations at Wayland High School and the commitment to making high achievement accessible to all students. The school is a positive and safe learning environment where safety measures are appropriately balanced with the need to have students assume increasingly expanded responsibility for their own decisions and behavior, contingent on their maturity and individual records of positive choices. The friendliness and openness of students in communicating with teachers, administrators, staff, other students, and with the visiting team, speaks eloquently to their appreciation for the opportunities they have at Wayland High School to grow as contributing citizens who are developing not only in intellect but also in character.

This academic environment is one of the main reasons the student body of Wayland High School is growing so rapidly: parents in the area want their children to have the opportunity to be taught in one of the best public schools in the state.

Wayland also is known to have an excellent theatre program, producing three seasons of theatre each year. Students can earn varsity jackets in performance art as well as in athletics.

Robert Anastas, a Wayland High School hockey coach, founded SADD at Wayland High School in 1981. Anastas founded the organization with his students after two Wayland High School hockey players were killed in separate car crashes.

Almost all WHS graduates attend a 2 or 4-year college; the percentage of college-bound graduates is upwards of 95%. Among the most popular colleges attended by graduates in recent years are University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Boston College, George Washington University, Brown University, Harvard University, Syracuse University, and University of Vermont.

The athletics of the school are defined by the "Wayland Warriors," whose symbol is a flint spear with a feather tassel. Amongst the various sports are also collaborations with athletic rival Weston High School, including the Wayland-Weston crew team and a Wayland-Weston girls' hockey team. In 2006, led by coach Scott Parseghian, Wayland won the Division 1A State Championship (AKA "The Super Bowl") in football. It was the first time in 31 years that Wayland had even been to the playoffs. It is the first Super Bowl win for Wayland.

In 2004-2005 the Wayland School Committee and Superintendent Gary Burton tried to secure funding for a new high school. A special election ballot proposing additional funds for the project was rejected by Wayland voters in January 2005, by a margin of 2645 to 2005.[1] Those in favor of a new high school claim that the student body is continuing to grow and will soon be too large for the existing buildings. This claim is countered by those opposing the new school who say that the argument runs contrary to publicly available enrollment figures for all grades which indicated that the largest years were students born 1990-1992. Some hold that if the proposal for a new school had been initiated in time to be ready for these students it might have been looked on more favorably. A survey conducted by the High School Building Committee in June 2005 found that 64.5% of respondents thought that the current high school facilities were inadequate, but 68.2% thought that the overall proposed price ($57 million) of building a new high school was too high. It is also important to note that 70.8% of Wayland residents do not have children in the public school system, making the expensive proposal a hotly-contested one. [2]

  • In November 1973, Aerosmith played a concert at Wayland High School. Tom Hamilton, the band's bass player, is a graduate of the school. Steven Tyler got naked on top of the school during the performance as well.
  • In the 1990's Wayland's Mens indoor track team was a legacy within the Dual County League (DCL). The Men's indoor track team had a record of 62-0, the team went eight years without losing a DCL meet.

Alberto Salazar - Winner of the Boston Marathon and three time winner of the New York Marathon

Tom Hamilton - Bass Player for Aerosmith

Ryan Sypek - Class of 2000, Actor (TV series "Wildfire")

Gary Gray (I) - Host and producer of the Playboy TV series The Helmetcam Show.

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