
WHS Counseling Office Proudly Presents Monthly Majors on April 24th.


On Thursday April 11, the students from Spanish 1 class participated in the UCM Film Festival competition. Maestra’s Reed students presented a movie in Spanish called “No más columnas” which won 3rd place in the category of originality. 22 schools of Missouri were competing with 67 films for Spanish language. During the competition they also attended a workshop. We are very proud of our students’ dedication and creativity.

Prom tickets may be purchased until 3:00 pm on Friday, April 12th. No tickets will be sold at the door.


In honor of the many military connected students at the high school, we will have a spirit week next week to show our appreciation.
• Monday – We sleep soundly because of the Military – Pajama Day
• Tuesday – Wear Red, White and Blue for Stars and Stripes Day
• Wednesday –The Military Shines Bright and Sparkles, Wear Sparkles Day
• Thursday – Military Parents are Superheroes, Dress as a superhero for Superhero Day
• Friday – Purple It up for Military Kids, Wear Purple Day

2024 WHS Senior Procedure



Congratulations to Peyton Bowman for earning 6th place in Dynamic Planet AND 5th place in Forestry at state Science Olympiad this weekend! There was some stiff competition this year and she did great!

The Robotics Competition Season Concludes
Thank you for your support and encouragement during our very long competition season.
On March 2nd our little robot, or FTC robot, went to the State competition. In our zeal to improve our autonomous scores, we added some hardware but were unable to get the software necessary to be successful. To add insult to injury, we rebuilt the robot with some older components that did not function as well, and the weight from the additional hardware killed our ability to hang. We did not advance.
We worked every day during Spring Break to build our big robot, or FRC robot, including the first day of our competition in Sedalia. While we had an excellent intake and shooter, we lacked any means of transitioning between the two, and we were a defensive bot. Our ability to hang should have been successful, but we were unable to stay in the air long enough after power was cut off and lacked the parts to fix it. We also made just about every mistake we could have made going into matches. That competition served as a great driving experience.
Over the next few weeks we built a great transition between the intake and shooter, improved our hang ability, and improved our autonomous routes. We vastly improved our performance on the field, but had more mechanical issues to troubleshoot and fix due to the rough nature of the game. One robot hit the wall so hard that it caused it to move 7 inches and they had to secure it with a ratchet strap. Our improvements were not enough to gain us an advancement.
What we did get out of this year was a quantum leap forward in our manufacturing processes, our ability to pivot to gain capability, and our ability to rapidly troubleshoot and repair our robot on the fly. We got a CNC router last spring from a DOD STEM grant and went from not knowing how to use it to being able to rapidly design and cut new parts that will vastly improve both robots. We evolved our CAD capability and our thinking about how to employ 3D printed parts that will vastly improve both robots. We also, after much hard work and frustration, perfected a new drive base that allows us to be competitive with the best teams in our competition. This drive base will serve , with minor configuration changes each year, as a solid base for our robot so we can concentrate on ever more capable mechanisms to play the game. Finally, the lesson learned through our first ever 2 competitions in an FRC season has provided us with increased skills in driving, building, and troubleshooting and repairing the robot that will pay dividends in our future competitions.
We will continue to meet less frequently through the end of the year to try some new concepts and get organized for next year. Please send any interested students our way.

Last Friday, five students from Mrs. Kearfott's Fashion and Advanced Design courses spent the day learning about and exploring the UCM campus and all it has to offer prospective students. They met the university president, toured a dorm, ate in a dining hall, visited with Dr. Melissa Abner from the Fashion Design and Merchandising Department about course offerings and career opportunities.






Warrensburg Area Career Center Greenhouse Spring Sale held April 11th and 12th in addition to April 15th and 16th. See attached flyer for more information.


Robotics begins competition today with a fully functional robot and great drive team. The matches can be viewed at 9 AM both Friday and Saturday on twitch.tv/firstinspires9. The match schedule for Team 4455, The Burger Bots, will be available on thebluealliance.com in The Greater Kansas City Regional. Good luck to Team 4455!

WHS Juniors competed with another school in an essay contest hosted by West Central Electric Cooperative. Out of 29 student essays that were submitted, 7 of them broke to the final oral competition, and 6 out of 7 of the finalists are from WHS! Here are the results:
1st Place, winning a trip to DC with the Youth Cycle Tour: Saul Logan
2nd Place, winning a trip to DC with the Youth Cycle Tour: Jonathan Henry Jr.
Runner's up, winning a trip to Jefferson City for the C.Y.C.L.E Conference are the following students:
Kennedy Crooks
Elora Coleman
Emmalee Cox
Adam Wisocky



Wednesday, April 3rd is Paraprofessional Appreciation Day.


National Assistant Principals Week - April 1st to 5th.


Prom is Saturday, April 13th from 8:00 pm to 10:30 pm. Tickets are $25 per person. Guest forms are available in the Assistant Principal's office. Guest forms are only required if the guest does not currently attend Warrensburg High School. Guest forms are due in the Assistant Principal's office by 3:00 pm on Friday, April 5th.



April Breakfast and Lunch menus




The KC Tech Council's Leadership and Empowerment for Girls in Tech (LEGiT) KC program has been meticulously designed to empower and equip female-identifying students entering their Junior and Senior years of high school with comprehensive tech exposure, career pathway guidance, leadership opportunities and invaluable mentorship.


Phones at the high school are working now.

Phones at the high school are currently down. Contact Mrs. Woods by email to jwoods@warrensburgr6.org for Attendance.

The University of Central Missouri’s Art Department hosted a high school contest and workshop day. Students participated in a screen printing workshop, played art games, went to figure drawing workshops, and completed in still life and observational contests!











High school juniors and seniors are invited to join Burns & McDonnell professionals at our Future U STEM camp June 17th through 20th.
