Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District
| Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District | |
|---|---|
| Address | |
88 Lakehill Road
Burnt Hills , New York, 12027United States | |
| District information | |
| Type | Public |
| Grades | K–12[1] |
| NCES District ID | 3605940[1] |
| Students and staff | |
| Students | 3,069[1] |
| Teachers | 261.38[1] |
| Staff | 302.75[1] |
| Student–teacher ratio | 11.74[1] |
| Other information | |
| Website | www |
Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District is a suburban school district headquartered in the Hostetter Leadership Center in Burnt Hills, a hamlet in Ballston, New York.[2] In addition to the Town of Ballston (including the hamlets of Burnt Hills and Ballston Lake), it also serves Charlton, Clifton Park, and Glenville.[3] Today, district enrollment typically hovers between 3,100 pupils to 3,200 pupils, with 400-500 students enrolled in each elementary school, approximately 800 students enrolled at Richard H. O'Rourke Middle School, and about 1,000 students enrolled at the high school.
History
The district was established in 1915 so residents could have their own local high school instead of paying to send their pupils to surrounding schools. It was formed out of three existing districts, each having one-room schoolhouses, making it the first consolidated school district in the state. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake School of Agriculture & Homemaking was established in 1916 and the first high school graduation ceremony was held in 1920 for two pupils. In the early 1930s, the front facing side of what was then the Lakehill Road School, and is now Francis L. Stevens Elementary had burnt down, and was rescontructed. Fourteen additional districts joined in the period 1925 to 1962, all of which had one-room schoolhouses.[4]
Many additional buildings were constructed throughout the 1950s. Pashley Elementary, the first building with the intent of teaching grades K-6 was built in 1951 following the post-war baby boom; at this point, many children continued to attend one room schoolhouses. In 1955, the BH-BL High School was built, and the Lakehill Road School was converted into Ballston Lake Elementary School (renamed Francis L. Stevens Elementary in 1967 to honor the district's first superintendent). Next, Glenhaven and Charlton Heights Elementary Schools were built, using the same design in order to save the district money.
In 1961, a final school was constructed, and the Junior High became the third building in the district on Lakehill Road. Throughout the 1960s, every building received a new addition to accommodate for the district's growing enrollment, which peaked at 5,467 students in 1970.
The 1980s and 1990s saw a few more major changes to the district. Sixth grade classes were moved from elementary schools to the Junior High School in 1988, and the building was modified to service pupils grades 6–8. Then, in 1994 the building was renamed to Richard H. O’Rourke Middle School, to honor a long-time superintendent upon his retirement. In 1981, Glenhaven Elementary was closed due to declining enrollment in the district. The space was renamed the Hostetter Administration & Leadership Center, and held the district's administrative office until a water main break led to extensive damage in 2009.
2013 racism incident
At the October 2013 homecoming football game against Amsterdam, six to twelve[5] BH-BL students chanted the racial slur "Amsterico," aimed at Amsterdam's larger Latin American population (BH-BL is predominantly white) until the BH-BL head coach Matt Shell addressed the crowd and threatened to forfeit the game.[6][7] After the game, the coach told reporters that "There's no place for it", but also said that "Kids are kids, and they get emotional."[8] The BH-BL administration apologized to Amsterdam, and promised to address "the recent situation with the entire student body" and use it as "an opportunity to increase our efforts in teaching students the importance of diversity and citizenship."[9]
Rankings and Statistics
Source:[10]
Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake High School is ranked #6 out of 47 schools in the Albany, NY Metro Area by U.S. News & World Report. It is also ranked #2,204 nationally, placing it in the top 12.5% of ranked American high schools.[11]
Burn Hills-Ballston Lake High School has a graduation rate of 96.4% (87.2% for the disabled, 87.7% for the economically disadvantaged).
New York Regents Examinations show far better proficiency amongst amongst Burnt Hills students compared to the state as a whole. For English, Burnt Hills has a 98% proficiency rate compared to New York's 79% average. For Algebra 1, Burnt Hills has a 90% proficiency rate compared to 62% state average. For Geometry, the school's rate is 95% compared to the average 57%, 98% to 74% in Algebra 2, and 92% to 67% in Earth Science.
Schools
Secondary:
- Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake High School
- Richard H. O'Rourke Middle School
Primary:
- Charlton Heights Elementary School
- Pashley Elementary School
- Francis L. Stevens Elementary School
Curriculum
Burnt-Hills-Ballston Lake High School offers the following Advanced Placement Classes (offering during a given time subjective to student interest):[12]
- AP Biology
- AP Calculus AB
- AP Calculus BC
- AP Chemistry
- AP Computer Science A
- AP Computer Science Principles
- AP English: Literature & Composition
- AP Environmental Science
- AP European History
- AP Macroeconomics
- AP Statistics
- AP U.S. History
- AP U.S. Government & Politics
- AP World History: Modern
Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake also has agreements with multiple academic institutions to grant college credit for classes offered in the high school; these include Schenectady County Community College, University at Albany, SUNY, Siena University (New York), State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York at Oswego, Hudson Valley Community College, and Russell Sage College.
Notable alumni
Burnt-Hills Ballston Lake has produced many notable individuals across the arts, athletics, and more.
Athletics
Source:[13]
- Jon Cardi (UNC-Chapel Hill) wrestling, ACC Academic All-American, champion Junior World Greco Roman Championships, three time state champion
- Vicki Cox Goguen (Keene State College) soccer and running, Academic All-American, Most Outstanding Physical Education major in New Hampshire, 3rd in San Antonio marathon
- Miles Irish (Georgetown University) track and field, 4x Big East Champion, 3x IC4A Champion, only male athlete to hold 5x NYS track & field records at once
- Neale Moore (SUNY Cortland), soccer, Pennsylvania Stoners, 4x All SUNY College player
- Eric Torkelson (University of Connecticut) football, Green Bay Packers, New England Player of the Year
- Jason Morris (Syracuse University) wrestling, Olympic Games silver medalist, 60 international medals in judo, World Championships medalist for judo, gold medalist U.S. Open, six time National Champion, eight times National Junior Champion, head coach for judo for the 2008 Summer Olympics
Performing and Visual Arts
Source:[14]
- Felicia Benson-Kraft (SUNY Albany) actor, Operations Manager at ABC News, co founder of Hackensack Theater
- Susan Boyajian (New York University) voice-actress, SpongeBob SquarePants, Squirrel Boy, Kirby Buckets
- Jennifer Goodwin Byrd (Rochester Institute of Technology) sculptor, statue on permanent display at RIT, sculpture displayed in Saratoga Springs
- Andy Curlowe (Montserrat College of Art) painter, many exhibitions, several publications, grant winner
- Brian Czach, musician, toured with Jimmy Castor, Kenny Vaughan, and more
- Alexander Doig (Pratt Institute) COO at SYNDUIT, worked on STAR detector with Brookhaven National Laboratory, created decorative posters for The Big Bang Theory sets, One Mile Hike founder
- Harry Allen Fawcett (American University) actor, broadway lead in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, also in Broadway's Rex, King of Hearts, and Shenandoah, The Edge of Night, General Hospital, Puttin' on the Hits, author, House of Cards, Mare of Easttown, FBI: Most Wanted
- Jeremy Hansen (St. Olaf College) musician and professor, Professor at Tennessee Tech
- Kristen Hansen (St. Olaf College) musician and professor, Senior Lecturer at Columbus State University, founding member of Barry Tuckwell Institut, Columbus Symphony Orchestra, published author
- Paul Harding (Syracuse University) designer, Design Director of Motion Graphics for firm, freelance collectables for DC Comics, Marvel Comics, and Star Wars
- Christopher Howard (University at Buffalo) dancer and teacher, Anastasia (musical), USC, Wright State University
- Maureen Jeram (Rhode Island School of Design) artist, Fulbright Grant, studied with Georg Baselitz
- Stephen Kostyniak (Juilliard School) musician, New York Philharmonic, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
- Lawrence Merritt (University of Oxford) actor, eight broadway shows, Kraft Music Hall, The Ed Sullivan Show
- Joel Ossenfort (Tufts University) artist, worked on John Sayles projects, The Devil Wears Prada, Law and Order SVU, Person of Interest (TV series)
- Colonel Thomas Palmatier (SUNY Potsdam, Truman State University, U.S. Army War College) musician, various high level musician positions in the Army (directing and commanding), Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Meritorious Service Medal
- Rob Partch (Temple University) musician, former performer with Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra, National Ballet of Canada, Canadian Opera Company, professional input for Yamaha Corporation
- Josh Preseissen (Fashion Institute of Technology) artist, Emmy Award nominee for directing, album 'The Wolves Hollow Album' was critically acclaimed, Art Director at Neoscape in Boston, successful mobile game developer
- Doug Sertl (Crane School of Music) musician, released acclaimed album, worked with Sammy Davis Jr., Andy Williams, Kenny Barron
- Todd Sisley (SUNY Purchase) pianist, performed at Lincoln Center and Tanglewood Music Festival, has partnered with Harry White (saxophonist), Carlos Prieto (cellist), Anne Azéma, and more, former editor of American organist magazine, interim director of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church
- Christianne Smith (Alfred University) artist, lecturer at Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Mobil Oil Award of Merit, named 'Best of Graphic Design' in Metroland (newspaper)
- Kate Snow (Cornell University) television journalism, NBC News
- Paul Suda (Emerson College) actor, Deadliest Warrior, The Last Ship (TV series), General Hospital, The Last Ship (TV series), Sam & Cat
- Jill Nyhan Zygo (SUNY Geneseo) actress, toured to 49/50 states, broadway in Oklahoma!, Education Program Manager at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, received AriZoni Award
References
- ^ a b c d e f "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for BURNT HILLS-BALLSTON LAKE CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
- ^ "How to get to BH-BL Schools & Offices". Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District. Retrieved April 12, 2019.
BH-BL District Office located in the Hostetter Leadership Center 88 Lakehill Road, Burnt Hills, NY 12027
- ^ Home. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District. Retrieved on April 12, 2019.
- ^ "History & Enrollment". Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake Central School District. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ Ettkin, Jacob (November 3, 2013). "No follow-up for racial taunting incident at BH-BL". The Daily Gazette. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
- ^ Smith, Cameron (October 13, 2013). "Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake apologizes for chant during football game". Yahoo!Sports. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "Chant leads to apology, release says". October 15, 2013.
- ^ "Derogatory chant delays high school game". Albany Times Union. October 12, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ Iorizzo, Peter (October 15, 2013). "Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake apologizes for chant during football game". Albany Times Union. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
- ^ "2024 | BURNT HILLS-BALLSTON LAKE SR HS - Report Card | NYSED Data Site". data.nysed.gov. Retrieved September 25, 2025.
- ^ "Burnt-Hills Ballston Lake Senior High School Rankings". U.S. News & World Report. September 25, 2025.
- ^ "Curriculum Guide". Burnt Hills - Ballston Lake Central School District. Retrieved September 25, 2025.
- ^ "2011 Hall of Fame Inductees". Burnt Hills - Ballston Lake Central School District. Retrieved September 25, 2025.
- ^ "Performing and Visual Arts Hall of Fame". Burnt Hills - Ballston Lake Central School District. Retrieved September 25, 2025.