Canyon del Oro High School (CDO) is a comprehensive public high school in Oro Valley, Arizona, located north of Tucson at the base of Pusch Ridge in the western foothills of the Santa Catalina Mountains. Established in 1964, CDO is one of three high schools of Amphitheater Public Schools and serves about 1,600 students in grades 9–12. CDO is an International Baccalaureate (IB) member school. The school name originates from Canyon del Oro (Spanish for Canyon of Gold) in the Santa Catalina Mountains, and the historic name of nearby Steam Pump Ranch on the National Register of Historic Places (named the Canyon del Oro Ranch when purchased by George Pusch in the late-1800s). The school mascot is the Dorado, a mythical Latin American warrior. The school colors are forest green and gold.

CDO is primarily known for its academic program and the notable number of Major League Baseball players the school has produced in recent decades. Additionally, CDO is consistently ranked among the top high schools in the U.S. by U.S. News & World Report and Newsweek Magazine. Specifically, in 2007, 2010, and again in 2011–2019, Newsweek Magazine rated CDO in the top 5% of public schools in the U.S. In 2011, Newsweek ranked CDO No. 408 in its list of top public schools in the U.S. (top 1.5 percent nationally). The Arizona Department of Education has consistently awarded CDO the highest rating in its system, most recently designating CDO an "A" grade school in 2024, and the Arizona Educational Foundation designated CDO a 2025 A+ School of Excellence. CDO regularly graduates students recognized by the National Merit Scholarship Program, and between 2000 and 2010, CDO graduated 42 National Merit Scholarship Semifinalists. CDO has the second-highest number of Academic Decathlon State Titles among Arizona high schools, crowned as State Champions in 2006, 2009, 2011, and five consecutive titles from 2014 to 2018. CDO also has a long history of students excelling in the annual Arizona State Math Contest, including first-place finishes. CDO is also ranked in the top Arizona schools for among the highest number of athletic state titles in large school sports (Arizona Interscholastic Association).

Recent notable awards and recognition

  • 2025: Arizona Educational Foundation designated CDO a 2025 A+ School of Excellence.
  • 2019-2020: U.S. News & World Report recognized CDO on their "Best High Schools" list in 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, and most recently in 2019-2020
  • 2018: CDO won its fifth consecutive Academic Decathlon State Championship, for a total of eight State Titles.
  • 2011: Newsweek ranked CDO 408th on its list of the nation's top public high schools (top 1.5% in the U.S.)
  • 2010: CDO finished as State Runner-Up in the Academic Decathlon state competition, and ranked 7th nationally
  • 2009: Kenzie Fowler was named the Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year in 2009 for the second consecutive year, and the first softball player to ever win the award twice. Fowler became only the 6th athlete in any sport to win the national honor twice, joining the ranks of basketball player LeBron James, and track star Marion Jones. Fowler ended her pitching career at CDO with a 105–8 record, and a 0.15 ERA in 685 innings. With the honor, the media noted that the award arguably cemented "Fowler as the best-ever modern high school softball player." Also in 2009, CDO teams finished as the 4A Division I Softball State Champions, 4A Division I Baseball State Champions, Fourth Place in the U.S. Academic Decathlon National Competition, Arizona Academic Decathlon State Champions, 4A Division I Girls' Basketball State Champions, and 4A Division I Boys' Soccer State Champions.
  • 2008: Kenzie Fowler received high school softball's most prestigious award, being named the Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year in 2008. Fowler was the first junior to ever win Gatorade's softball award, and just the second athlete from Arizona to win the national honor in any sport. CDO's Bre Ladd was the other Arizona athlete, named Gatorade's National Volleyball Player of the Year in 2002. Also in 2008, CDO had a first place student finish in the Arizona State Math Contest, with four other students placed in the state's top 50 scorers, First place finish at the Southern Arizona Regional Science Fair, 4A Division I Softball State Champions, Softball team finished the season ranked 5th nationally by USA Today, and Arizona Academic Decathlon State Runner-Up and ranked in the top 20 nationally.
  • 2006: Arizona Academic Decathlon State Champions, 5th place in the National Academic Decathlon, 4A Division I Girls' Track & Field State Champions, Five students placed in the state's top 50 scorers in the Arizona State Math Contest, with another 10 students scoring in the top 10 percent in the state.
  • Named an Excelling School by the Arizona Department of Education (2005–present).
  • Southern Region Academic Decathlon Champions (2002–2023).

History

Financing through bonds

The dramatic population growth in the Amphitheater School District during the 1950s placed increasing demands on the district's existing schools. Enrollment reached capacity at the district's sole high school, Amphitheater High School, in the late 1950s. As a result, District Superintendent Marion Donaldson developed a bond proposal in June 1959 that included the purchase of a second high school site in the district. Voters approved the $1.9 million bonds ($12.8 million in 2006) by a 4 to 1 margin. Population growth in the area north of the Rillito River and Tucson was rapidly expanding, and the original purchased for the second high school was then determined to initially serve a middle school population as well. Another bond issue was proposed for the construction of Canyon del Oro School in June 1961, with $1.4 million ($9.2 million in 2006) for the first phase of the school, and $2.3 million ($15.3 million in 2006) for expansion of the school. The gymnasium at the school featured a four-sided score board suspended above the basketball court (Amphitheater by Peyton Reavis, 1981).

The CDO campus expanded with the gradual population increase north of Tucson, and the first graduating class was in the spring of 1968. New construction occurred through the late 1990s, adding technology and laboratory science facilities for chemistry, physics, and biology. A second gymnasium was completed in the 1970s, along with an expanded library, fine arts complex, and bookstore. As of 2007, the campus included 21 buildings on .

Among the most notable families whose children attended CDO during the 1960s and 1970s was the Udall family. Mo Udall represented much of southern Arizona in the U.S. House of Representatives at the time, and his brother Stewart Udall served as president of the Amphitheater School Board before later serving as Secretary of the Interior under U.S. Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Mark Udall, who later served as a U.S. congressman and U.S. Senator from Colorado, was CDO's first student body president.

From the 1960s through the 1980s, CDO became a dominating presence in golf and tennis, capturing the respective state titles nearly each year. CDO also won back-to-back state championships in both basketball and football in the late 1970s. The CDO girls' basketball team registered an undefeated 28–0 record in 1987, capturing the 5A State title (Arizona Interscholastic Association).

Substantial growth

As the Oro Valley area experienced significant population growth in the 1990s, enrollment at CDO increased as well. At its enrollment peak, CDO served a student population of nearly 3,100 in 2001. CDO had the highest enrollment of any high school in southern Arizona, and was one of the largest schools in the state. The growth and desirability of Oro Valley (the fastest growing municipality in Arizona for several years in the 1990s), was often credited by the media to CDO and the educational reputation the school established (Arizona Daily Star). In 2001, CDO received relief as the Amphitheater School District opened Ironwood Ridge, the district's third high school, in northwestern Oro Valley.

Current state of the school

Canyon del Oro continues to register among the highest standardized test scores in Arizona, and a notable number of National Merit Scholars. CDO is one of the few high schools consistently designated as "Excelling" (the highest academic distinction) by the Arizona Department of Education.

CDO offers:

  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Calculus AB & BC
  • Chemistry
  • Computer Science
  • English Language & Composition
  • English Literature & Composition
  • French
  • German
  • Economics
  • Music Theory
  • Physics C: Mechanics
  • Psychology
  • Spanish Language
  • Statistics
  • Studio Art
  • U.S. History
  • U.S. Government & Politics
  • World History

Over 90% of the school's graduates seek post-secondary education. Half (49.5%) of CDO faculty have attained a master's degree or a PhD.

Athletics

The school competed in the Arizona Interscholastic Association (AIA) 5A Division for 25 years, during which it earned multiple regional and state championships across various sports.

Following the opening of a new high school and changes in district enrollment, the school now competes in the AIA 4A Sonoran Conference, Division I.

Athletic state titles

CDO teams and individuals have won over 90 State Championships, and placed as the State Runner-Up over 40 times. CDO has also had 9 athletes medal in boys' golf, most recently in 2011. In 2011 the boys' cross country team won the Division II state title over runner-up Ironwood Ridge. This was the first state championship for boys' cross country in school history.

In 1993, the school won Arizona's Tony Komadina Award for its girls' athletic program and received the Overall Excellence Award for the highest achieving athletic program in Arizona seven times. CDO has won more 4A and 5A state championships than all other schools in southern Arizona, with the exception of the oldest, Tucson High School (Arizona Interscholastic Association).

Below is a comprehensive table including all athletic state titles won by CDO teams. Canyon del Oro teams competed at the 3A equivalent level from fall 1966 to spring 1968, and the 4A equivalent level from fall 1968 to spring 1980. Between fall 1980 and spring 2005, CDO teams competed at the 5A level, resuming 4A competition from fall 2005 to 2009. The AIA reclassified class 4A-I as Division II in 2010.

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PLEASE ADD VERIFIABLE STATE TITLES IN REVERSE CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER. FOR EXAMPLE, IF A CDO TEAM WON THE STATE CHAMPIONSHIP IN 2009, AND ALSO IN 2010, LIST THE 2010 STATE TITLE BEFORE THE 2009 STATE TITLE, WITH THE TWO STATE TITLES SEPARATED BY A COMMA (I.E. "2010, 2009".) ALL TITLE ENTRIES ARE VERIFIED WITH THE ARIZONA INTERSCHOLASTIC ASSOCIATION'S OFFICIAL RECORDS AS REFLECTED ON THE AIA WEBSITE. THANK YOU.

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{| class="wikitable"

! Sport !! State Champion

|-

| Baseball || 2023, 2022, 2015, 2009, 2002, 2000,

1997, 1994, 1984, 1979

|-

| Girls' soccer || 1997

|-

| Softball || 2017, 2012, 2011, 2009, 2008, 2007, <br /> 2005, 2001, 1992 In 2006 the team became the Arizona Academic Decathlon State Champions, outscoring defending state champs Mesa Mountain View 46,482 points to 46,406 points. CDO represented Arizona in the National competition, placing 5th. In 2007, the team scored 45,667 points, placing second in the state behind Mesa Mountain View with 47,402 points. In 2008, the team scored 46,600 points, placing second in the state for the second consecutive year.

Arts and entertainment

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  • Jeff Biggers (1981), American Book Award-winning author, historian, journalist, novelist and playwright, author of the novel, Disturbing the Bones, with filmmaker Andrew Davis, and many other prize-winning books.
  • Kyle Balda (1989), animator and film director, co-director of the animated films The Lorax, Minions, and Despicable Me 3, and director of the animated film Minions: The Rise of Gru
  • Cord Jefferson (2000), film director and winner of the 2024 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for writing and directing American Fiction, a film also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture
  • Brianne Leary (1975), actress and inventor, former host of The Disney Channel's Walt Disney World Inside Out and Animal Planet's Petsburgh USA
  • Tom Zoellner (1987), author of Train: Riding the Rails that Created the Modern World, from the Trans-Siberian to the Southwest Chief

Journalism

  • Masha Hamilton, (1974)journalist and novelist (Concern Worldwide, Associated Press)

Politics

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  • Jonathan Rothschild (1973), Mayor of Tucson, Arizona (2011-2019)
  • Mark Udall (1968), U.S. Senator for Colorado (2009-2015); former U.S. Representative for District 2 of Colorado (1999-2009)

Sports

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DO NOT ADD AN ALUMNUS UNLESS HE OR SHE IS NOTABLE AND CITABLE! PLEASE FOLLOW CITATION PRECEDENT. MALE COLLEGE ATHLETES DO NOT QUALIFY AS CITABLE, BUT FEMALE COLLEGE ATHLETES DO QUALIFY, SINCE COLLEGE IS THE HIGHEST LEVEL OF COMPETITION FOR WOMEN IN MOST SPORTS. THANK YOU.

-->* Brian Anderson (2000), outfielder for the Kansas City Royals of Major League Baseball

  • Callista Balko (2004), softball player (starting catcher) for the 2006 and 2007 University of Arizona NCAA Women's College World Series National Championship teams
  • Ka'Deem Carey (2011), running back for the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League, running back for the University of Arizona (2011-2014); nominee for the Heisman Trophy (2013)
  • Chris Duncan (1999), baseball player for the St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball
  • Shelley Duncan (1998), outfielder for the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball
  • Scott Hairston (1999), outfielder for the Oakland Athletics of Major League Baseball
  • Ryan Hietala (1992), professional golfer in the PGA, 1995 WAC Player of the Year
  • Ed Hochuli (1969), Super Bowl referee official for the National Football League
  • Ian Kinsler (2000), Israeli-American 4x All Star second baseman in Major League Baseball
  • Blake Martinez (2012), inside linebacker for the New York Giants, of the National Football League
  • Anthony Pedroza (1998), basketball player, member of the Mexico national team
  • Colin Porter (1994), outfielder for the Houston Astros, St. Louis Cardinals, New York Yankees of Major League Baseball
  • George Roop (2000), professional mixed martial artist, former cast member of SpikeTV's The Ultimate Fighter: Team Nogueira vs. Team Mir, former UFC fighter
  • Pete Shufelt (1989), professional football linebacker
  • Jason Stanford (1995), pitcher for the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball
  • Jaide Stepter Baynes (2012), Track and field athlete
  • Donny Toia (2010), Defender for Real Salt Lake, of Major League Soccer
  • Turner Washington (2017), professional track & field athlete

Other

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  • Jodi Hildebrandt (1987), member of school's first state championship girls basketball team, counselor and YouTuber convicted of aggravated child abuse

Attendance boundaries

The attendance boundaries of Canyon del Oro encompass segments of the communities of Oro Valley, Casas Adobes, and Catalina Foothills.

The northern boundary roughly follows the Cañada del Oro and East/West Lambert Lane. The eastern boundary is defined by Catalina State Park and the Coronado National Forest/Pusch Ridge Wilderness Area. The southern boundary is East/West Orange Grove Road from North Shannon Road east to North First Avenue. Between North First Avenue and the North Alvernon Road parallel, East Ina Road is the southern boundary (including the neighborhoods of Pima Canyon Estates and Cobblestone Estates). The western boundary is North Shannon Road.

Feeder schools

Elementary schools in the Canyon del Oro attendance area include Marion Donaldson, Winifred Harelson, Mesa Verde, and Copper Creek. L.W. Cross Middle School and Wilson K-8 Middle School feeding into Canyon del Oro.