Harding Middle/High School
Fairport Skippers Harding Early College School
Official Colors: Maroon & White
Students are known as: The Skippers
Guiding Principles: Citizenship, Dedication, Honesty & Responsibility
Anchored in Community and Illuminating Futures
Harding Schedule
Harding MS/HS **New for 24/25**
Students may enter the building at 7:15 am for breakfast. Classes begin at 7:35 am and dismissed at 2:16 pm.
Auburn Career Center/Fairport Harbor Bus Information
Attendance Matters At Fairport Harbor Schools
Document explaining attendance and absences.
Fairport Attendance Website Page
FHS Alma Mater
Hail to thee, our Alma Mater,
Here’s heart and hand to you,
And to your highest honor,
We promise to be true.
We salute thee dear old high school,
Our hats are off to you,
We love you now and evermore,
To Fairport High we’re true.
FIGHT SONG
Drive, drive on down the field
Skippers of white and maroon
Don’t let them through that line,
And we will win this game tonight,
RAH! RAH! RAH!
So onto victory,
we will cheer them as they go,
Our honor defend,
We will fight to the end,
For Harding High.
Check out The Port Report on YouTube! This is a collection of student videos and interviews. @theportreport
The tip line is an anonymous reporting system that accepts tips via call, text, webform, and mobile app 24 hours-a-day.
Our Mission
Collaborate. Innovate. Accelerate.
Our mission is to ensure high-level learning for every student through collaboration, innovation, and acceleration.
Our Vision
Focus on learning
- We are a student-centered organization.
- We believe learning is constant.
- We use proven instructional strategies for individualized instruction.
- We celebrate our successes.
- We provide a rigorous and robust curriculum.
Collaborative Culture
- We build knowledge through collective inquiry and professional development.
- We promote innovation & critical thinking for the development of global competencies.
- We uphold the district's mission, vision, values, and goals.
Focus on results
- We monitor student progress toward specific learning targets.
- We create data-driven environments where learning is constant.
- We provide feedback that is cyclical in nature and drives instructional decisions.
- We reflect on the results of teaching and learning.
Acceleration
- We believe in accelerated learning for all through the advancement of students in subjects at a rate that places them ahead of where they would be in a regular school curriculum.
- We use student’s talents and interests to advance them to their fullest potential.
- We differentiate through self-paced instruction, continuous progress, curriculum compacting, and extra-curricular opportunities.
- We assist students in making informed academic choices through dual enrollment and college and career readiness.
Our History
Referenced from: A History of Fairport Harbor Ohio 1976, By The Fairport Harbor Bicentennial Committee.
Very little is known of the first educational opportunities in early Fairport, or Grandon, as it was first named in 1812. The earliest reference that had anything to do with Fairport schools was the enumeration of youth between the ages of four and twenty-one years residing in District No. One of Painesville Township in October of 1842. Apparently sometime before this enumeration took place, school districts were organized in Lake County.
Fairport's first school was located on Third Street; it housed only one teacher, a bell of rectangular iron, and a large stove in the middle of the room for heat. The first brick school building was built in 1876 and was also located on Third Street, the building currently houses the fire department and village hall.
In August of 1899, the Board of Education decided to let the citizens vote on the construction of a new school. In the fall of 1903 students moved into the new building constructed on Plum Street. The high school building on Vine Street opened in September of 1921. "A grand celebration with a large parade was held the day Harding High School was dedicated. That evening, a program was given in the new auditorium, which was packed to the doors." The stadium was dedicated on a sunny day on October 3, 1931, when Fairport won over Painesville 13-6.
In the spring of 1924 by resolution of the Board, the names of the three Ohio presidents who died in office were given to the three schools of Fairport. The high school officially became Harding High School; the old Third Street building became the Garfield School; the Plum Street school became McKinley School. In September 1936, Fairport broke from the County Board of Education and remains an Exempted Village School to this day.
Fairport schools have always been an integral part of our community. Today we are innovating our theory and practice to ensure the preservation of our traditions.