Lexington High School (Massachusetts)


Lexington High School is a public high school located in Lexington, Massachusetts, United States, serving students in ninth through twelfth grade.

Campus

Lexington High School's facilities are divided into four buildings.
The Arts and Humanities Building contains the bulk of the following departments: English, Social Studies, Fine and Performing Arts, and Physical Education. It also has the Donald J. Gillespie, Jr. Auditorium, the Ralph Lord Gymnasium, and a fieldhouse. Commons I and Commons II are used as cafeterias and meeting places. The library and the main administration office are also in this building. Thus, the Arts and Humanities building is informally and frequently called the "main" building by many students.
The Science Building contains the Science Department. The building contains the "Science Lecture Hall", which is used for, among other things, math competitions and detentions.
The World Language Building contains the World Language and the Health Education Departments.
The Math Building contains the Math Department, as well as the LABBB program.
The "Quad" is an outdoor common area. It is bounded by the Main building, the Science building, and a covered walkway between the Science building and the Foreign Language building.

Demographics

As of the 2018-19 school year, LHS had an enrollment of 2,263 students, making it the fifth largest traditional high school in Massachusetts and sixth largest overall. With 179 classroom teachers, the school operates with a student–teacher ratio of 12.6:1. As of 2019, minority enrollment accounts for 54.1% of the student body, a roughly 275% increase over the past two decades driven by a 400% increase in the Asian and Asian-American population. There were 135 students eligible for free lunch and 29 eligible for reduced-cost lunch.

Rankings

In 2020, LHS has been recognized by US News and Niche.com as the top traditional high school in Massachusetts and the 4th and 2nd ranked public high school overall, respectively.

Academic competition

Debate

Lexington High School has a historically strong debate program, consisting of three divisions: Lincoln–Douglas, Policy, and Public Forum, all taught as elective courses. Lexington is the only school in the country with the distinction of having won all three major divisions at the Tournament of Champions. It has also had winners or runners-up at other national championships including the National Catholic Forensic League, National Debate Coaches Association, and National Speech and Debate Association. As of 2019, Lexington's debate team has won both the Policy division and the Sweepstakes Award at the State Championship for the last 45 years.
Lexington won the Policy division at the TOC in 1994. A Lexington team won the TOC in the Public Forum division in 2007. Lexington won the Lincoln-Douglas debate division at the TOC in 2012. In 2020, Lexington again won the TOC in Lincoln-Douglas. Lexington has won top speakers awards at the NDCA in Lincoln-Douglas and Public Forum, and at the TOC in Policy.

The Lexington Winter Invitational Tournament

The team annually hosts the Lexington Winter Invitational Tournament, nicknamed "Big Lex," with the categories of Public Forum, Policy, and Lincoln-Douglas. The event is a Tournament of Champions qualifier at the quarterfinal level and drew 1000 debaters in 2014 from as far away as California.

Math Teams

Through the Massachusetts Mathematics League and the Greater Boston Mathematics League, Lexington High School has had superior success in qualifying for the MAML State Meet and the NEAML New England meet. Lexington has won the Massachusetts State Championship Math Meet 20 times between 1978 and 2013, competing in the large school division: 1978-1980, 1992-1995, 2000–2008, and 2010-2013. In the New England Championship Math Meet, Lexington has won seven championships: in 1994, 2002, 2003, 2006-2008, and 2012.
Lexington also participates in the MAML-organized Massachusetts Mathematics Olympiad, where many of its students have succeeded in finishing in the top 20 statewide.
Lexington High School's math team has sent teams to HMMT. Lexington won the entire competition in 1998 and 2001. Additionally, Lexington won second place in 2002 and 2009; fourth in 1999 and 2000; fifth in 2004, 2008 and 2012; sixth in 2003; seventh in 2013; and eighth in 2007. In many years, Lexington High School also has had a few students finish in the top ten in certain individual categories.
The high school has also sent teams to the Harvard-MIT November Tournament. Lexington won second place overall at the 2008, 2009, and 2011 iterations of the tournament. Lexington finished fourth at the tournament in 2010 and 2012.
The WPI Invitational Math Meet, which has been held continuously since 1988, has been won by Lexington High School 21 times, from 1988-1994 and 1996-2010. In 2011, Lexington finished in second place behind Northfield Mount Hermon School, and in 2012, Lexington finished in third place.
Lexington competes in the American Mathematics Competitions. In 2009, 5 students from Lexington High School, as well as 2 from Clarke, qualified for the USAMO. In 2010, with the split of the USAMO format into the USAMO and the new USA Junior Math Olympiad, Lexington had five USAMO qualifiers, and five USAJMO qualifiers. From 2006-2011, Lexington had a total of 34 USAMO qualifiers, including four middle schoolers. In the first two years of USAJMO's existence, Lexington had nine total qualifiers, including two middle schoolers. Between 1987 and 2011, there were 76 USAMO qualifiers from Lexington High School, 7th most among all high schools in the nation.
The math department of the Lexington Public Schools system has received national merit through the Mathematical Association of America, as the Edyth May Sliffe Award has been won by 8 Lexington Public Schools teachers a total of 11 times. Lexington High School also has the most two-time winners. Indian Woods Middle School, Shawnee Mission, KS and Frost Middle School, Fairfax, VA are the only other schools to have teachers win the award 10 or more times.
In 2010, the Lexington High School Math Team founded the annual Lexington Math Tournament, inspired by tournaments such as HMMT, and geared for middle school students.

Science Teams

Lexington High School's FIRST Tech Challenge team, 2 Bits and a Byte, went to the FIRST world championship in 2012, 2014 and 2015, and again in 2018. In 2014, their roster reached 53 people, much greater than FIRST's recommended team size of 10 people. Lexington High School's all-female FTC team, The Parity Bits, was founded in the spring of 2014.
Lexington High School's National Ocean Sciences Bowl team won the National competition between 1998 and 2002, the first five years of the competition's existence. In 2009, the team won the regional Blue Lobster Bowl and returned to the national competition to win second place. The team won regionals in 2011 and repeated their 2nd-place performance at the national competition. The team won regionals in 2012 and placed 4th at the national competition. The team won regionals in 2016 and placed 6th at that year's national competition.
Lexington High School's National Science Bowl team has qualified for the national competition 17 times, more than any other school in Massachusetts, doing so in 1993, 1997, 2001, 2003, 2005, and in 2008-2019. The team won 2nd place nationally in 2009, losing in the final to Mira Loma High School. In 2010, the second team from Lexington also reached the semifinals of the regional qualifying competition before losing to the first team. In 2011, Lexington's B Team defeated Lexington's A Team in the regional finals to qualify for the National competition. In 2012, after defeating the B Team in the regional finals, Lexington's A Team outlasted 68 of the nation's finest science bowl teams to win the National Science Bowl competition. In 2013, Lexington placed 3rd; in 2015, 5th; and in 2016 beat Thomas Jefferson and lost to Clements to place 4th.
The team was undefeated in the 2017 and 2018 national finals, beating TJHSST and North Hollywood High School to become the national champions.
Science Olympiad teams also exist at both Lexington High School and Diamond Middle School. The high school team won the state competition from 2001 to 2003, second place in 2009 and third place in 2010 at the state competition. The middle school team won second in 2010, fourth in both 2008 and 2009, and third in 2007.
Lexington High School's Envirothon team qualified for the national competition in 2008 and placed 7th.
Lexington High School's Invention Club won 3 gold medals at the regional invention convention in April 2017, and had its Captain win 3rd place at Nationals
Lexington High School's Computer Science Team won second place in the Senior-5 division at the 2009-10 American Computer Science League All-Star Competition. The team finished third and fourth in the same division in 2010-11 and 2008-09 respectively.

Quiz Bowl

The Lexington Quiz Bowl team was founded in the 2012-2013 school year. The year of its establishment, the team placed 33rd at Nationals in the 2013 NAQT High School National Championship Tournament, and also placed 16th in the junior varsity division of the National History Bowl. In 2015, the team placed 5th overall at the National History Bowl. In 2016 a team placed 2nd overall at the National History Bowl, the highest ever finish at a national competition for a Lexington team, as well as finishing 5th overall at the NAQT High School National Championship Tournament, following it up with a ninth-place finish at the 2017 High School National Championship Tournament.

Model UN

Run as an after school club, Lexington High School's Model UN program is one of the fastest growing and most competitive programs in the nation. Lexington excels at regional conferences such as BUSUN, EagleMUNC, and DartMUN, in addition to various local high school conferences. Lexington won outstanding small delegation at EagleMUNC in 2016 and outstanding small at DartMUN in 2015. Lexington also sends delegations to NAIMUN every year, many of whom return with awards. Finally, Lexington hosts an annual high school conference, LexMUN, which is run entirely by the student body. Many public and private schools come from the Boston area to participate.

Chess

In 2008, the Lexington High School chess team made its debut in the high school section of the annual Massachusetts State Chess Championship, where it placed 4th overall in pursuit of the Hurvitz Cup. In 2009, the team placed 2nd in the freshman section of the annual National K-12 Scholastic Championship in Dallas, Texas.. In 2010, the team placed 2nd in the Rhode Island State Championship.
The Lexington High School chess team has won the Massachusetts State Chess Championship and hoisted the Hurvitz Cup in 2011, 2013, and 2014.

School sports

Lexington High School offers the following sports:
Lexington's teams compete in the Middlesex League. Its past athletic rivalry was with Concord-Carlisle Regional High School. A new rivalry has sprung up with Burlington High School.

Athletic titles and acknowledgements

Lexington High School sports teams have received the following accolades:
In 2005, Fred Phelps, of Topeka, Kansas, and his church protested the Lexington High School graduation because of the school's support of its gay-straight alliance. The group returned in 2009.

''The Musket''

The Musket is the school newspaper, and has notable popularity around Lexington.
Until 1965, the school newspaper was called The High-Spot.

Controversy

In 1997 The Musket ran into controversy by refusing to run an abstinence ad. The paper's First Amendment rights were maintained with the victory in Yeo v Town of Lexington, a case argued in the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.

Notable alumni