As of the 2022–23 school year, the district, consisting of nine schools, had an enrollment of 7,317 students and 647.3 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 11.3:1.[2]
Schools
The district has two high schools (East and West), two middle schools (Candlewood and West Hollow), and five elementary schools (Otsego, Paumanok, Signal Hill, Sunquam and Vanderbilt).[3]
High schools
Half Hollow Hills East
High School East is located at 50 Vanderbilt Parkway in Dix Hills, New York,[4] Hills East is fed from West Hollow Middle School and is the larger of the district's two high schools. The class of 1978 was the last class where East was the exclusive high school in the district; commencing in 1979 there were graduating classes from both high schools.[citation needed]
High School East features a domed planetarium that houses a Evans & Sutherland digital projection system that is generally used to host class trips from the middle and elementary schools.[5]
High School East is home to the Eugene Orloff Auditorium, a two-level theater boasting a seating capacity of 2200, making it the second largest not-for-profit auditorium on Long Island.[citation needed] The stage is a full Broadway-sized stage (88 feet wide, 49 feet deep, three stories tall for fly space (hanging scenery). The stage has an orchestra pit containing two pistons (although only one functions) that are capable of raising and lowering the pit.
Half Hollow Hills West
High School West, also known as Hills West,[citation needed] is located at 375 Wolf Hill Road in Dix Hills, New York.[6] The school was built in 1975 and in its first year was 10th grade only, for class of '78. After its first year of classes, the district was split and the two high schools became typical 10, 11, 12 grade each. The school grounds of High School West are adjacent to those of Signal Hill Elementary School; however, students from Signal Hill Elementary School attend High School East rather than High School West. West students generally attend Candlewood Middle School from 6th to 8th grade. As of 2019, Michael Catapano serves as the principal of Hills West.[7]
Hills West has been successful in a variety of sports including Cross Country, Track, Football, Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, Swim, Dance, and Volleyball. In 2008, the Cross Country team won the Suffolk County A Championship. In 2009, they once again won the Suffolk County A Championship, however a disqualification of one of the runners led them to take second place. The winter track team won 7 straight county titles (2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011) and in the spring of 2007, 2008 and 2009 the spring track team has won the league by going undefeated. In addition, the Colts have fielded strong baseball teams over the years, winning multiple league titles, two county championships, and a state championship in 2003 under the coaching Thomas Migliozzi who recently accomplished his 500th win as the head coach. The Varsity Boys Basketball team has won 4 Suffolk County AA championships (2008, 2010, 2011, and 2016) And won back to back Long Island Championships (2010 and 2011). The first time that has been accomplished in school history. In 2009, the Football team also won its first Long Island Championship in school history. The Boys Basketball team has made the class AA playoffs every year since 2006. Former Head Coach Bill Mitaritonna was named Newsday's HS Basketball Coach of the Year (2010). The Varsity Soccer team made the state semi-finals in 2007 and won the Long Island Championship in 2017. The Hills Swim team has gone undefeated and won league and county champs. The Varsity Football Team has made the playoffs the past 5 of 8 years and were the 2009 Long Island Champions and the 2018 Long Island Champions. In 2014, The Hills West Varsity Softball team won its first ever Suffolk County Championship with a 22–4 record. Hills West Dance team, the Wranglerettes, are the 2007 champions in the Long Island Kickline Association competition, winning in the jazz category for the 14th year, and in the newly created hip hop category. The official school mascot is the Colt. The school's colors are red and gold.[citation needed]
Middle schools
West Hollow Middle School, which opened in 1970, is located at 250 Old East Neck Road in Melville, is the largest middle school in the district. Candlewood is located at 1200 Carll's Straight Path in Dix Hills.
Elementary schools
In the district's history, there were as many as 11 operating elementary schools. The first to close was Sweet Hollow in the 1970s. In the early 1980s, Taukomas, The Hills School, and Manasquan closed due to declining enrollment. Manasquan became the district's central office building (later renamed as Fran Greenspan Administration Center) and fed to Burr's Lane Junior High School (also closed, eventually becoming part of the Five Towns College campus in the early 1990s). Vanderbilt, Otsego, and Forest Park used to all feed to Candlewood, which feeds to High School West. Signal Hill, Chestnut Hill, Paumonok, and Sunquam used to all feed to West Hollow, which feeds to High School East. Sunquam re-opened in 1999 after being closed since 1991. It underwent extensive renovations and an expansion, and is located across the street from the Melville branch of Half Hollow Hills Community Library. Chestnut Hill and Forest Park closed in 2014 (eliminating one school from each high school's tracks).
Administration
The Fran Greenspan Administration Center (formerly known as the Manasquan building) houses the central offices of the Half Hollow Hills School District. It is located at 525 Half Hollow Road, directly adjacent to the southern end of the High School East campus. In addition to housing the offices of the Superintendent and other administrators, Central Office serves as the location for a small mock-astronautics program for children and certain community events, as well as child care services. Reach CYA is also housed in the Central Office Location.[citation needed]
^"Boyz to men". Sunday Mail. Kuala Lampur. October 22, 2000. p. 74. ProQuest325040516. Buh Buh graduated from the Half Hollow Hills High School East in the early 1990s.(Subscription required.)
^Gay, Verne (March 21, 2011). "ON TV: Macchio mambo?". Newsday. Cablevision. p. A14 – via ProQuest. Ralph Macchio, the original "Karate Kid," ... was born in Huntington, raised in Dix Hills, and attended Half Hollow Hills West High, graduating in 1979.(Subscription required.)
^Kaufman, Bill (April 26, 1983). "Roughening the edges to become an 'Outsider'". Newsday. Cablevision. p. A21 – via ProQuest. Macchio, the son of Ralph and Rosalie Macchio and a 1979 graduate of Half Hollow Hills High School West ...(Subscription required.)
^Pawel, Miriam (May 14, 1981). "SHOWBIZ: Promoted to star, ex-student comes home". Newsday. Cablevision. p. 11 – via ProQuest. ... Macchio ... graduated two years ago from Half Hollow Hills High School West in Dix Hills.(Subscription required.)
^Parks, Steve (March 13, 1997). "The Day Trip That Never Was / With $60,000 and lots of imagination, a Dix Hills filmmaker takes his first feature along the LIE to Soho". Newsday. Cablevision. p. B4 – via ProQuest. [Mottola] never dreamed of making movies while going through Candlewood Elementary School or even after graduating from Half Hollow Hills High School East.(Subscription required.)
^Guzmán, Rafer (March 26, 2009). "Dix Hills' Greg Mottola relives 'Adventureland'". Newsday. Cablevision. Archived from the original on September 7, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2013 – via ProQuest. ... Greg Mottola, a Dix Hills native whose 1984 summer job there inspired his new film, "Adventureland," may have an explanation. ... His 1996 debut, the satirical drama "The Daytrippers" (featuring Hope Davis, Liev Schreiber and Parker Posey), followed a dysfunctional Long Island family on an eventful drive into Manhattan. His second, more famous film, "Superbad," was a super-crude comedy starring then-unknowns Jonah Hill and Michael Cera.
^Lipson, Karin (April 23, 2003). "A Rookie Savors His Baptism by Fire Island / LI filmmaker shoots 'Mickey Stern' at his parents' beach house". Newsday. Cablevision. p. B2 – via ProQuest. He was inspired, Prywes said, by the burgeoning Long Island indie scene, especially the work of two fellow alumni of Half Hollow Hills High School East ...(Subscription required.)
Central and Union Free school districts are authorized to operate high schools, though not all do, while common school districts may not operate high schools.