Stroudsburg High School
Stroudsburg High School is a public high school located in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, in Monroe County, Pennsylvania. In the 2019–2020 school year, the school's enrollment was reported as 1,259 pupils in 10th through 12th grades.[1] The school's mascot is the Mountaineer. The school is part of the Stroudsburg Area School District.
Stroudsburg High School | |
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Address | |
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1100 West Main Street , 18360 | |
Information | |
Type | Public high school |
School district | Stroudsburg Area School District |
Principal | Jeff Sodl |
Faculty | 77.47 (FTE)[1] |
Grades | 10th – 12th |
Number of students | 1,259 (2019–20)[1] |
Student to teacher ratio | 16.25[1] |
Language | English |
Color(s) | Maroon and White |
Athletics conference | Eastern Pennsylvania Conference |
Mascot | Mountaineers |
Feeder schools | Stroudsburg Junior Senior High School |
Website | http://high.sburg.org/ |

Extracurriculars
The Stroudsburg Area School District offers an extensive number of clubs, activities and a publicly funded sports program.[2] These activities include:
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Athletics
Stroudsburg High School competes athletically in the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference (EPC) in the District XI division of the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association, one of the premier high school athletic divisions in the nation. In 2007–08, Stroudsburg High School won the MVC Cup, a trophy for the best winning percentage in MVC games. All home football games, track meets, and occasional home boys and girls soccer games are held inside Ross-Stulgaitis Stadium, which was renamed for former head football coaches Fred Ross and Jerry Stulgaitis. The Varsity "S" Club raised funds to renovate the field with new artificial turf as well as a composite track.
Teams include:
Fall:
Winter:
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Spring:
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School newspaper
The school newspaper, The Mountaineer, is a recipient of the Pennsylvania School Press Association Gold Award for Overall Excellence. Its staff consistently receives high-ranking awards for its in-depth coverage of school and teen related topics. Its current adviser is Mr. Matthew Sobrinski. In the past, it was funded entirely through local advertisers and sold for fifty cents to the student body. However, in the 2007–2008 school year, school funding has allowed the staff to disseminate the periodical to every student in the building.
Five issues are typically printed each year through the local newspaper, the Pocono Record. The front, center, and back are full color pages. The final issue of the year lists the future plans for all graduating seniors, whether they intend on continuing their education, joining a branch of the military, or obtaining a job.
Renovation
With an influx of new students, the district had expressed the need for a new building. Residents had debated whether the current building should be renovated or whether a new building should be built to accommodate this growth. In April 2008, members of the school board voted 5–4 in favor of renovating the existing high school on West Main Street.
As of January 2012, a newly built section was opened to students. This section host the new gymnasium, which can hold about 4,000 people; library/media center; up-to-date science labs, art rooms, and workshops; and a film studio.
Dress code controversy
In the spring of 2008 the school district discovered that the current dress code which had formerly only banned the wearing of ripped or sagged jeans on boys, and the wearing of revealing clothes on girls, was being flagrantly violated. In response to this, it was proposed that there be a standardized dress policy consisting of khaki or black pants and skirts and polos in either black, white, or maroon. This policy was immensely unpopular among parents, teachers, and students alike and sparked an online protest group apply named Stroudsburg Students Against The Dress Code.[3] This group produced little real protest, besides making limited appearances at school district meetings and convincing students to wear black arm bands for a short period of time, the group was unsuccessful, and the policy went into effect on August 30, 2008.[4] Initially, students questioned whether or not this new dress code was an infringement on their right to free speech. In large part, the dress code was reported to have increased problems rather than solving them because of its inability to define what was considered appropriate, and its ambiguous enforcement. In the spring of 2009, the administration released findings that showed the dress code had caused disciplinary referrals to decrease by 1000, but this recent statistic has been thrown into question by many staff members as well as students due to the fact that it did not include any of the violations for dress code. The figures from the past years, however, did include dress code violations, and there were many more violations in 2009.
References
- "Stroudsburg HS". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
- "Disclosure of Interscholastic Athletic Opportunities". Pennsylvania Department of Education. 2013.
- Pocono Record (May 13, 2008). "Stroudsburg school dress code in spotlight tonight".
- Stroudsburg Area School District Administration (2008). "Stroudsburg School District Dress Policy".