Misplaced Pages

Welsh High School

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Welsh High School ( WHS ) is a grade 9-12 senior high school in Welsh, Louisiana , United States. It is a part of Jeff Davis Parish Public Schools .

#626373

8-510: As of 2011 it had 283 students. Welsh High athletics competes in the LHSAA . Football Baseball Girls Basketball Football This Louisiana school-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Louisiana High School Athletic Association The Louisiana High School Athletic Association ( LHSAA ) is the agency that regulates and promotes the interscholastic athletic competitions of all high schools in

16-1060: A private/religious nature; the smallest schools are all either members of Class 1A or Division IV. Classes 2A through 5A and Divisions II through IV may include some schools that do not play football, including schools that have all-girl enrollments. Schools with single-gender enrollments have their enrollment numbers doubled for classification purposes. LHSAA has twenty-three competitive sports programs, twelve for boys and eleven for girls. The LHSAA sports programs are Baseball , Softball , Basketball , Swimming , Bowling , Tennis , Cross Country , Indoor Track and Field , Outdoor Track and Field , Football , Golf , Volleyball , Gymnastics , Wrestling , and Soccer . Starting in 2016, select enrollment schools and non-select enrollment schools will participate in different playoffs in Football, Baseball, Softball, and Basketball. Before 1935, Louisiana had organized athletic programs for white children only. In 1935 William Gray of Southern University established

24-676: The Louisiana Interscholastic Athletic and Literary Association (LIALO) to provide an organization for the African-American students of the state. This organization was absorbed into the LHSAA in 1969 and 1970 when the federal courts forced Louisiana to integrate the public schools. The LHSAA has not recognized the accomplishments or records of LIALO schools and their students pre-integration, and many of those records are lost. In 1990, Louisiana became

32-532: The 2006 school year, most of the affected LHSAA schools were able to compete under their own school teams. The Southern Quality Ford Cup is the Louisiana High School Athletic Association's (LHSAA) All Sports Award that recognizes the leading overall athletic program in each of the LHSAA's seven classes. The competition is based on a school's performance in the 23 sports governed by the LHSAA. Any team that finishes in one of

40-462: The first state in the nation to include a wheelchair division in its state track and field competition for disabled student athletes. Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita hit Southern Louisiana at the beginning of the 2005 high school football season. The evacuation of New Orleans and other communities forced dozens of high schools to close for months, and several campuses were damaged or destroyed by flooding and wind damage. The football season

48-580: The state of Louisiana . LHSAA was founded in Baton Rouge , Louisiana in October 1920. The LHSAA's main office was in Hammond from 1953 until 1972, when it returned to Baton Rouge. The LHSAA is governed by an executive director and an executive committee, with representatives from each of the association's class divisions. LHSAA member schools include public, private, and parochial schools throughout

56-534: The state. LHSAA is affiliated with the National Federation of State High School Associations . As of 1996, LHSAA included 410 member schools and an annual certification of approximately 70,000 student athletes each year. LHSAA is divided into nine statewide classes and divisions, based on each school's student enrollment for grades nine through twelve: Classes 5A, 4A, 3A, 2A, 1A, and Divisions I, II, III, and IV . Divisions are made up of schools of

64-469: Was not canceled, but several games were postponed or canceled. Some schools in the disaster area were forced to withdraw from competition. Most public schools in Orleans Parish , St. Bernard Parish , and Plaquemines Parish were so badly damaged that they were forced to cancel their entire school year. Other disaster-area schools combined to form joint teams in fall of 2005 and spring of 2006. By

#626373