Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School
Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School is a public high school in Montgomery County, Maryland. It is named for two of the towns it serves; it also serves Kensington and Silver Spring. It is located at 4301 East-West Highway, in Bethesda. In May 2012, Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School was ranked #6 in the state of Maryland, and #151 in the nation.
Bethesda-Chevy Chase is a part of Montgomery County Public Schools.
The school serves the Chevy Chase and Bethesda areas including the towns of Chevy Chase, Chevy Chase View, Chevy Chase Village, and Somerset; and the villages of Chevy Chase Section Three, Chevy Chase Section Five, Martin's Additions and North Chevy Chase. Schools within the Bethesda-Chevy Chase cluster include Westland Middle, Silver Creek Middle, Bethesda Elementary, Chevy Chase Elementary, North Chevy Chase Elementary, Rock Creek Forest Elementary, Rosemary Hills Elementary, Somerset Elementary, and Westbrook Elementary.
Courses
Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School offers courses in many fields.Foreign languages
Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School offers languages including:- Arabic, level 1, 2, 3, and 4
- Mandarin Chinese, level 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6
- French, level 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and AP French Literature
- Spanish, level 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, AP Spanish Language, and AP Spanish Literature
Mathematics
- Geometry
- Algebra, level 1, 2, and a special program called Bridge to Algebra
- Precalculus
- Calculus with Applications, AP Calculus AB, AP Calculus BC, Multivariable Calculus and Differential Equations
- IB Mathematical Studies, IB Mathematics
- Statistics, Statistics and Mathematical Modeling, AP Statistics, and Advance Statistics
Science
- AP Environmental Science
- IB Environmental Science
- IB Physics
- AP Biology
- IB Biology
- AP Chemistry
- IB Chemistry
- Chemistry
- Physics
- Biology
History and Social Sciences
- AP and IB Standard Level Psychology
- AP U.S. History
- AP European History
- AP Macro and Microeconomics
- AP World History
- AP Comparative Government
- IB History
- East Asian Studies
- Middle Eastern Studies
- Peace Studies
- AP Modern World and standard level Modern World
- AP United States Government and Politics
English
- AP English Language
- AP English Literature
- IB English
Other
Music
B-CC's Music Department has earned two Grammy Foundation awards for their ensembles.Led by Marshall White, the department boasts a Symphonic and Concert Orchestra and Band, Advanced Band, Pep Band, Jazz Band, Drumline, and a number of chamber groups such as a string quartet, brass group, string ensemble, pit orchestra, and jazz combo. It also has several choral groups, led by Lisa Itkin, and individual instrument courses such as guitar and piano. The department also offers a rigorous IB Music course as a regular period during the day.
History
Begun as a two-story, 14-room facility on Wilson Lane in 1926, B-CC High School opened at its current location on East-West Highway in 1935 at 44,995 ft² in a building designed by Howard Wright Cutler. New buildings or additions to existing buildings were constructed over the years:- 1936 - 36,515 ft² added
- 1950 - 49,616 ft² added
- 1952 - 22,396 ft² added
- 1959 - 32,408 ft² added
- 1966 - 29,023 ft² added
- 1970 - 20,295 ft² added
- 1975 - 8,378 ft² added
- 1976 - 9,616 ft² added
In the summer of 1994, parents, teachers, administrators, business people and other supporters of B-CC High School formed the Community Coalition for Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. Its charge was to re-engineer and refocus the high school in an increasingly urbanized and cosmopolitan area. CC-B-CC representatives were encouraged to think broadly and innovatively to create programs that would lead B-CC High School and Montgomery County Public Schools into the next century.
Because of this effort, in February 2002, B-CC High School re-opened its doors after a two-and-a-half year, multimillion-dollar, comprehensive modernization that, among other things, combined the historic 1935 and 1936 structures into one building. It had a addition, of renovations of the original 1935, 1936 and part of the 1950 buildings, and of demolitions of most of the 1950 building, 1952, 1959, 1966, 1970, 1975, and 1976 buildings. The building now encompasses.
In Fall 2018, B-CC opened a addition with 34 new classrooms, a new dance studio, and more offices.
Facilities
The school has 80 classrooms, a media center with 30 computer workstations and TV studio and media production facilities, a greenhouse, a music laboratory and choral room, two gymnasiums and a weight training room, a 900-seat auditorium, and a cafeteria that serves breakfast and lunch. B-CC also has two "firsts" among Montgomery County Public Schools - a Cyber Café, opened in March 2003, and a state-of-the-art Language Lab, installed in the summer of 2004.In 2008, B-CC High School was equipped with 80 digital classroom Promethean boards.
Athletics
B-CC fields more than 25 athletic teams, known as the Battlin' Barons.Fall sports
- Cheerleading
- Cross country
- Cross country
- Field hockey
- Football
- Golf
- Poms
- Rowing
- Rowing
- Soccer
- Soccer
- Tennis
- Volleyball
- Equestrian
- Handball
Winter sports
- Basketball
- Basketball
- Bocce
- Cheerleading
- Ice hockey
- Indoor track
- Indoor track
- Poms
- Swimming & diving
- Wrestling
- Equestrian
Spring sports
- Baseball
- Gymnastics
- Lacrosse
- Lacrosse
- Outdoor track & field
- Rowing
- *State Champions - 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
- *National finalists - 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
- Rowing
- *State Champions - 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
- *National finalists - 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
- Softball
- Tennis
- *County Champions- 2015
- *State Champions-2015
- Volleyball 2015
- Volleyball
- Ultimate frisbee
- *State champions - 2014, 2015, 2016
- Equestrian
Activities
Academic
B-CC High School has a state championship varsity physics team.Music and Theatre
B-CC is a Grammy Foundation signature school. In 2005, Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School won the Maryland State Theatre Society's award for best musical for its production of Urinetown.In April 2008, B-CC attended the Boston Heritage Festival. All of its music groups received golds as well as several trophies and plaques. They also received soloist awards for a number of their musicians. The 2010 music department went to New York City, where B-CC won multiple awards, including the "Heritage Sweepstakes" award and the "Best Individual Ensemble" Award, which went to the Symphonic Orchestra.
Previous music department trips have taken students to Montreal, Chicago, New Orleans, Boston, and Orlando. Each trip has seen B-CC's ensembles participate in the Heritage Festival, with the notable exception of the 2013 trip to New York, in which groups attended clinics and were coached by professional musicians.
Notable staff
- Colman McCarthy, peace studies teacher
Notable alumni
Government and politics
- Andy Billig, Washington state senator from the 3rd District
- David Boren, U.S. Senator and Governor of Oklahoma; President of University of Oklahoma
- Chet Culver, Governor of Iowa, 2007-2011
- Howard A. Denis, Maryland State Senator, 1977–1994
- Daniel Dominguez, federal judge
- William Frick, member of the Maryland House of Delegates, 2007–2019
- L. Craig Johnstone, U.S. Ambassador to Algeria, and Deputy-High Commissioner for Refugees
- Peter Jo Messitte, federal judge
- Peter Navarro, Director of National Trade Council
- Neal Potter, county executive of Montgomery County, 1990–1994
- Ruy Teixeira, political scientist
- Roger W. Titus, federal judge
Business
- Jose Ferreira, CEO of Knewton
- Philip J. Kaplan, internet personality
- Frank Radice, media businessman, former President of National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences
- Jonathan I. Schwartz, CEO of Sun Microsystems
Academia
- Alfredo Jocelyn-Holt Letelier, Chilean historian
- John D. Hoffman, Manhattan Project chemist
- David Stuart, Mayanist scholar, youngest recipient of MacArthur Fellowship "genius grant"
Sports
- Mitchell Bobrow, karate fighter, 1969 All American Karate Grand Champion Madison Square Garden
- Moise Fokou, football player, linebacker for NFL's Tennessee Titans
- Frank Funk, MLB player
- Bill Guckeyson, 1937 NFL Draft; killed as a fighter pilot in World War II; namesake of the school's athletic field
- Collin Martin, Major League Soccer midfielder for D.C. United
- Elliana Pogrebinsky, figure skater
- Joe Urso, arena football player
- Ethan White, Major League Soccer defender for D.C. United
Arts and entertainment
- Martin Blank, playwright, screenwriter, and producer
- Gaelan Connell, star of the movie Bandslam
- Tommy Davidson, comedian, cast member of TV series In Living Color
- Neal Fredericks, cinematographer, notably for The Blair Witch Project
- Robert Gordon, rockabilly singer
- Si Kahn, singer and songwriter
- Daniel Kessler, guitarist and founder of the band Interpol
- David Simon, creator and executive producer of HBO series The Wire
- Becky Stark, actress and lead singer of Lavender Diamond
- Daniel Stern, actor, appeared in two Home Alone movies
- Vicky Tiel, fashion designer
- Stefanie Zadravec, playwright
Media and journalism
- Rita Braver, TV broadcaster, CBS News correspondent
- John Harwood, Chief White House Correspondent for CNBC
- Austin H. Kiplinger, journalist and philanthropist
- Charles Lane, columnist for The Washington Post; former editor of The New Republic magazine
- Kati Marton, journalist
- Andy Pollin, radio personality, sports talk station WTEM
- Peter Rosenberg, radio and TV personality, Hot 97
- Andy Serwer, journalist and former managing editor of Fortune magazine
- David Tate, former CEO of Rantel Research, Inc.; current Director of Analytical Associates of Bethesda
- Carol Stuart Watson, illustrator and publisher, co-founder of The Georgetowner''
Books
- Tracy Chevalier, author of Girl with a Pearl Earring
- Joe Haldeman, science-fiction writer, author of The Forever War
- Laura Hillenbrand, author of ' and '
- A.M. Homes, author of The End of Alice
- Michael Lowenthal, author of Avoidance
- Laurie Strongin, author of Saving Henry: A Mother's Journey
- Matthew Zapruder, poet, The Pajamaist