EHS Clubs
There is something for everyone!
Academics
FBLA High School helps high school students prepare for careers in business through academic competitions, leadership development, and educational programs.
By the end of their FBLA High School experience, it is the goal that every member will:
Develop an understanding of what it means to lead
Understand fundamental business principles and how business impacts all sectors
Demonstrate the ability to use technical skills to solve problems
Create a post-graduation career plan
Family, Career and Community Leaders of America (FCCLA) is a national Career and Technical Student Organization (CTSO) for students in Family and Consumer Sciences (FCS) education in public and private schools through grade 12. FCCLA offers intra-curricular resources and opportunities for students to pursue careers that support families. Our purpose:
To provide opportunities for personal development and preparation for adult life.
To strengthen the function of the family as a basic unit of society.
To encourage democracy through cooperative action in the home and community.
To encourage individual and group involvement in helping achieve global cooperation and harmony.
To promote greater understanding between youth and adults.
To provide opportunities for making decisions and for assuming responsibilities.
National Honor Society at Eastern High School recognizes students with outstanding accomplishments in the areas of scholarship, character, leadership, and service. Members must continually exhibit academic achievement, leadership –either overtly or silently, honorable and admirable character, as well as service within the Eastern community. Students with a GPA greater than 3.5 and a clear discipline record are notified during second semester of their sophomore year that they are eligible to apply. Student applications are reviewed and those students recommended are then extended an invitation to Spring Induction.
Eastern’s National Honor Society’s largest and most well-known project is Holiday Care-A-Van. During the weeks between Thanksgiving and winter break, students promote the donation of canned goods and money for the purpose of creating food baskets for those in need; the baskets are delivered by seniors. Other service projects that members participate in are after-school tutoring and the candlelight processional at Graduation.
National Honor Society sponsors are: Mrs. Drake and Mrs. Thacker
JROTC prepares you for life, not for the military. It is given during school hours, but includes many out-of-classroom activities. We cover the basics in history, government, technology awareness, current events and physical fitness. Additionally, we teach leadership skills (like how to motivate yourself and others) and personal skills (how to study correctly, take tests, interview for jobs). We offer extracurricular activities like Drill Team, Raider Team and Color Guard.
Out-of-class activities are planned, organized, and executed by the Cadets, for the Cadets. It is an organization which is operated by the members of the organization. Out-of-class activities consist of camping trips, rappelling trips, high-wire events, snow skiing, white-water rafting, fund-raising, community service, service learning, and a Military Ball.
NO JROTC CADET IS UNDER ANY OBLIGATION TO JOIN THE MILITARY. Our interest is simply to give Cadets an opportunity to develop and improve themselves in ways schools generally do not offer.
Imagine an activity so captivating that you spend hours working on it for weeks at a time. That is what can happen when TSA members engage in TSA competitions. Only TSA members have the opportunity to compete at exciting state conferences and then at the annual National TSA Conference. Expert judging by technology and engineering educators and industry representatives inspires the best from participants. Members are rewarded not only with medals or trophies, but also with memories of the camaraderie and the challenge of participating in a National TSA Conference.
Clubs
ACE Mentor addresses pressing workforce needs, offers a range of exciting opportunities for students, and plays a crucial role in bridging the skills gap, with continuous mentor opportunities from high school through to full-time employment.
PRIMARY GOALS
Help build a large, diverse, and better-prepared workforce.
Prioritize engaging students and communities traditionally underrepresented in the industry.
Assist and guide students by providing scholarships, internships, and mentoring as they pursue career pathways into the industry.
The group formerly known as BAMF (Barely Athletic Mostly Funny), the Aristocrats are funny people that do a lot of strange stuff. Aw, yeah. It's strange people and a lot of funny stuff. Aw, yeah. It's all that and a bag of chips. Introspective, classy, sophisticated, mature, aquamarine, lenient, aeronautical, denoting greater powers, and cheese... none of this relates to us at all!
Ha. Joke's on you. Told you we were funny. So about those Mets…no, really! We're good stuff. A little random, a touch of cow costume here and there – just give us some free therapy and we'll be fine, not to mention a free car and a trip to Jamaica while you're at it, and... ahem. Cough. Focus.
JOIN US!!!! We're funny. Haha. Yay. Wow. Excellent. Woo. Party. Just remember – if you think you've got what it takes, you probably don't; we're not all stuck up like that. So don't look at us funny. We know where you live and we're not afraid to sell Girl Scout Cookies there. So Be A Mad Fly - Box At Michigan Funnels - Banish A Mongolian Fox - Banjo At Midnight Friday - Bounce And Mumble Freely. Do all that and more for the low, low cost of $999,999.02 and know this, - "We don't have an attitude problem - you have a perception problem." Peace out.
The Eastern High School Art program is one of the best in Jefferson County and the State of Kentucky. Every year, students at Eastern are recognized for their artistic flair as they enter contests and showcase their work throughout the county, state, and the nation.
The Art department hosts their annual Art festival, where thousands of students, parents, and members of the community stop by to view the creativity of Eastern's student body. At the festival, awards and recognition are given to all students.
Eastern High School has it's own Best Buddies Chapter! Since 1995, Best Buddies High Schools has paired students with intellectual and developmental disabilities in one-to-one friendships with high school students. In the past, individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities have not had the opportunity to have friends outside of their own special education classroom. By introducing Best Buddies into public and private high schools, participants are crossing the invisible line that too often separates those with disabilities from those without.
Best Buddies High Schools also offers students a unique opportunity to develop leadership skills. With the support of school faculty and Best Buddies staff, students lead and direct the chapters in their schools.
The book club meets on Main Street during lunch on Wednesdays. We typically read one book per month. All are welcome.
When you're not old enough to go on The Weakest Link, or Who Wants to be a Millionaire, where do you turn?
Quick Recall is a club designed to exercise students' minds by asking tough questions, and expecting quick answers. Each year Quick Recall competes locally in our county, and also takes many trips outside the Louisville area to compete. Eastern has traveled to Dunbar, Hart County, Russell, and Central Hardin high schools to play some tough competition from all over the eastern half of the U.S. Eastern also takes a yearly trip to Vanderbilt University and has gone as far as Atlanta to play in tournaments. The season is a long one with matches beginning in early October and the final tournament of the year played in late April.
Eastern is fortunate to have a chess team which competes in the JCPS League every Thursday from October to January annually. The matches are on Thursdays, at 3:30pm. Practice is on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, from 2:30 to 4:00pm. Our students put much work into the practices and games and are very successful year after year.
Chess is, by far, one of the most challenging games to date. Intellectually, it is the antithesis of the modern-day computer games which are fast, furious and unfortunately, more popular with our students. For mental nutrition and strength, there is nothing like the game. Studies have been made which indicate that students who are taught chess have an easier time with the mental gymnastics of math and science later in their scholastic careers.
"You don’t have to be an athlete or Christian to be in FCA"... that’s their motto. Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) is a club that anyone can join. They usually have meetings on Wednesday morning before school, where they sing songs, listen to guest speakers, and just have fun. FCA also has SEE YOU AT THE POLE every year, where students gather around the school flagpole and pray
Faculty sponsor Mr. Horan, wants to make FCA bigger and better by getting kids involved in the club. FCA had a Halloween Bash last year where Eastern students ate food, played games, and met some new people. It was a great turnout and will hopefully be an even larger event next year.
If you don’t want to be in an academic club or sport, FCA is a great way to be involved in the school and the community. It is a chance to meet new people and have a great time!
Visual & Performing Arts
Walk by the Orchestra room on any day of the week, and you will hear bits and pieces of classical music practiced and perfected. What does all this practice amount to, you ask? The entire group will compete at the Kentucky Music Educator’s Association Festival in the spring. Individuals will also audition for seats in the All-County and All-State Orchestras, very prestigious positions in the music world.
The orchestra is not just about winning awards. In addition to a Holiday Care-A-Van performance, a rally to celebrate the donation of food to needy family's, put on by NHS - the group also entertains at their winter and spring concerts. Mr. Brian Powell, their orchestra director, will be taking orchestra on a concert tour of New York City in May.
With the motivation given to them by Directors and their hard work, the band has excelled to rise to a level not previously known to be associated with Eastern. Upon traveling across the universe, they encountered many successes to bring their already superior reputation up one notch higher. In Youngstown, Ohio, they received 7th place out of 28 bands from 9 different states, received two Reserve Grand Champion Awards, and were awarded many distinguished ratings.
The colorguard is a staple of Eastern tradition. They stun the masses with their performances.
The many opportunities colorguard provides for its members prepare them for their season of winterguard. Previously, Eastern's winterguard won second in state and attended winterguard International, a competition very few Kentucky schools reach.
It is 9 a.m. on a Monday morning in mid-July. The heat is already growing intense as 150 teenagers (still half-asleep) trudge slowly down the steep concrete steps leading to a lower parking lot at Eastern High School. These 150 will spend the next four months of their lives (nearly 500 hours, to be more exact) on this parking lot and up on the empty grass field next to the stadium counting, "walking around," running, and exercising muscles they didn't previously know they had. Sounds easy, right?
Wrong. This group, known as the marching band at Eastern High School, consists of some of the hardest-working and most dedicated individuals throughout the entire building. Times may get a bit unflattering through the sweat, blood, and tears (and that is not an exaggeration), but they push through it for their love of music and for the love of success.
The percussion ensembles are at the core of the percussionists music education. These ensembles provide the students with an intimate knowledge and understanding of the structural elements of music, music as a creative art form, the cultivation of habits, attitudes, and appreciations. Percussion instruments are unique in music because they play such a wide range of roles. This also demands that the students learn techniques for hundreds of different instruments. Because there are so many different instruments in the percussion family, they can be arranged to become their own stand-alone ensemble in addition to playing with the concert bands.