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Forest High School (Florida)

Coordinates: 29°08′39″N 82°03′59″W / 29.1441446°N 82.0664781°W / 29.1441446; -82.0664781
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Forest High School
Address
Map
5000 Southeast Maricamp Road

, ,
34480

United States
Coordinates29°08′39″N 82°03′59″W / 29.1441446°N 82.0664781°W / 29.1441446; -82.0664781
Information
School typePublic secondary
Established15 August 1969 (1969-08-15)
School districtMarion County Public Schools
SuperintendentDiane Gullett
CEEB code101258
PrincipalLamar Rembert 
Teaching staff95.00 (FTE)[1]
Grades9–12
Enrollment2,325 (2022–23)[1]
Student to teacher ratio24.47[1]
Color(s)Green, Gold & White
     
MascotWildcat
RivalVanguard High School
AccreditationFlorida State Department of Education
Websitewww.marionschools.net/fhs

Forest High School is a school near Ocala, Florida, United States. It has an EMIT (engineering) program. The school's colors are green and gold and the school mascot is the Wildcat. As of 2014, it had an enrollment of some 2,058.

Forest High School moved to its current location on Maricamp Road, southeast of the city limits of Ocala, in 2005. The school was originally on Fort King Street in Ocala, at the 1959 campus of Ocala High School. Prior to 1965, the school was for white students only. In 1965, a group of 34 students from the nearby black school, Howard High School began attending. In 1969 the courts mandated the schools became fully integrated and Howard was closed. Vanguard High School was opened the same year, and the Marion County School Board put to rest the name Ocala High School.[2]

Forest High School belongs to the Marion County School District.

Programs

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Engineering and Manufacturing Institute of Technology (EMIT)

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EMIT is a four-year magnet engineering program at Forest High School. EMIT aims to teach its students engineering fundamentals to prepare them for postsecondary colleges or universities in engineering. The curriculum is heavily project-based that often includes problem-solving tasks which must be built and later presented to teachers. These projects typically cover the basics of many engineering disciplines, including civil engineering, aerospace engineering, and more.

EMIT was created from a $1.2 million Florida Department of Education grant in 1994. An application is required to be considered for admission.

Shooting

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On April 20, 2018, at 8:29 a.m, a 19-year-old former student went on school premises armed with a sawed-off 16-gauge Winchester Model 12 pump-action shotgun, a black tactical vest, and a blue backpack full of gloves and shotgun shells.[3] The perpetrator, later identified as Sky Bouche, smuggled the gun into school in a guitar case. He entered the boys restroom to load his gun and put on his vest and gloves. Bouche then exited the restroom armed with his weapon. He passed one girl in the hallway, but she did not notice his clothing or the fact that he was armed. Bouche then shot once through a classroom door and hit one 17-year-old student in his ankle. Immediately after, he surrendered to the school staff out of guilt. Marion County Sheriff's Office School Resource Deputy Jim Long soon arrested him and had Bouche taken into custody.

In court, Bouche stated that his reason for wanting to shoot up the school was because he figured it was the only way to get out of his violent home life.[4] Bouche also stated that he chose to do it on April 20th since it was the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre. Bouche was charged with Terrorism, Aggravated Assault with a Firearm, Culpable Negligence, Carrying a Concealed Firearm, Possession of a Firearm on School Property, Possession of a Short-Barreled Shotgun, Interference in a School Function, and Armed Trespassing on School Property. In 2021, Bouche was sentenced to 30 years imprisonment, with the possibility of parole only after 25 years, followed by an additional 30 years of probationary release.[5] After Bouche was sentenced, he stated that he never intended to kill anyone, but wanted to "let people know there's something wrong" with him.[6]

As a result, Marion County School Board member Nancy Stacy cancelled all school gun-reform walkouts in Marion County due to the shooting.[7]

Notable alumni

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "FOREST HIGH SCHOOL". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved April 7, 2024.
  2. ^ Fillmore, Andy. "Howard High class of 1968 remembers good times, challenges of integration". Ocala Star Banner. Retrieved 13 May 2020.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Images: Evidence, video stills from Forest shooting". The Gainesville Sun. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  4. ^ "He fired a shotgun into a classroom door, police say, then said 'sorry' to the injured student". The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  5. ^ Cutway, Adrienne. "Man who shot student at Forest High School sentenced to 30 years in prison". ClickOrlando. Retrieved 21 Sep 2021.
  6. ^ "Former student who opened fire at Ocala school sentenced to 30 years in prison". WESH Orlando. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Florida school district cancels walkouts after shooting". Cable News Network. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
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