Edmonds Woodway High School
Edmonds-Woodway High School | |
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Location | |
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Information | |
Type | Public secondary school |
Motto | There are two kinds of people in this world: Warriors and those who wish they were! |
Established | 1990 |
School district | Edmonds School District |
Principal | Jay Park[1] |
Faculty | 200 |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 1,648 (May 2011) |
Campus type | Suburban |
Color(s) | Purple, green, yellow and orange |
Mascot | The Warrior |
Website | Edmonds-Woodway H.S. |
Edmonds-Woodway High School is one of five high schools in the Edmonds School District in Edmonds, Washington, USA. It serves students in grades 9-12. Edmonds-Woodway is ranked as the #318 high school[2] in America by Newsweek Magazine.
Principal Miriam Mickelson and Assistant Principals Geoff Bennett and Robert Johnson are the administrative leadership team. In 2012, Mickelson replaced Michelle Trifunovic who began her tenure in 2007 when Edmonds-Woodway's long term principal, Alan Weiss, retired. Alan Weiss was principal from 1995 to 2007. Rainer Houser was the first principal of Edmonds-Woodway from 1990 to 1995.[3][4]
The school's schedule is based on a 95-minute, 3-period block schedule; students attend 1st, 3rd, and 5th periods on Monday and Wednesday and 2nd, 4th, and 6th periods on Tuesday and Thursday. On Friday, students attend all six classes for roughly 50 minutes each.
History and facilities
Edmonds-Woodway was formed when Edmonds High School and Woodway High School, neighboring schools with a traditional rivalry, merged in 1990. They combined the Edmonds and Woodway High School colors (gold, purple, orange and green), although purple and green the dominant colors used. The school used the old Woodway High School building until construction on a new facility at the old Edmonds High School site.
The new school, which opened in 1998, is located close to Highway 99 and is accessible from Interstate-5. It is designed around a central courtyard with a separate theater building and classrooms organized in small learning communities. It received several regional and national design awards, including the 1990 Masonry Institute of Washington's Masonry Excellence Award for the use of masonry throughout the project, as well as the national annual design award of the Council of Educational Facilities Planners International, the 1999 James D. MacConnell Award for outstanding new educational facilities.[5] Bassetti Architects of Seattle was the architectural firm for the new building.
Academics
IB Program
In 1996, Edmonds-Woodway became an International Baccalaureate (IB) World School, offering the IB Diploma Programme.[6] The Edmonds-Woodway IB program is one of the largest in the Pacific Northwest, with 22 IB classes, over 400 IB-enrolled students and over 70 full-IB Diploma graduates (2013–14). Because of enrollment limitations on the program, in-district students whose home high school is not Edmonds-Woodway may participate in the program only through an application process. Students whose home high school is Edmonds-Woodway may participate as partial-IB students (Course Candidates), taking as many (or as few) IB classes as they choose. IB candidates take IB tests in a variety of IB subject areas, qualifying them for college credit at over 1,600 colleges and universities. Since 2011 the school's IB Coordinator has been David Quinn.[7]
AP Program
In addition to its 22 IB courses, Edmonds-Woodway offers three Advanced Placement (AP) courses: AP Statistics, AP Calculus, and AP Studio Art Photography,[8] for which students can also gain college coursework credit. The current school AP Coordinator is Paul Sevig.
National student recognition
In 2009, Edmonds-Woodway student Sally Chu was named as the school's first US Presidential Scholar.[9] In 2005, the school had eight National Merit Scholar finalists, the most of any high school in the state. In 2006 the Edmonds-Woodway Deaf Academic Bowl Team competed for the first time. It was the first team in the history of the Academic Bowl to win a Regional competition their first year.
Culture
Deaf community
Edmonds-Woodway has the largest deaf and hard-of-hearing student population in the Edmonds School District, due to programs offered for deaf and hard-of-hearing students. Deaf students attend from surrounding school districts, who may decide to contract with ESD for their students to attend the EWHS program in cases where they cannot offer a comprehensive program to meet the needs of their deaf students. The school offers an American Sign Language (ASL) program. Four years of instruction in ASL are offered to students who are not deaf or hard-of-hearing. These students can take ASL to fulfil the world language requirement for high school graduation. Some students pursue careers as deaf interpreters or as DHH Teachers (Teachers of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing).
Lifeskills program
In addition to its Deaf and Hard of Hearing program, Edmonds-Woodway has a Lifeskill Program for students with "mild to moderate developmental disabilities."[10] The Lifeskills Program is run by Debbie Sand, Amory Cable, Debra Herold and Donna Spencer. Lifeskills students at Edmonds-Woodway, coached by paraeducator Becki Bell,[11] often take part in the annual Washington State Special Olympics. During the 2011 Winter Games in Wenatchee, Edmonds-Woodway students brought home awards.[12] At the beginning of the 2011-2012 school year, Edmonds-Woodway cheerleaders invited Lifeskills students to participate on the school cheer squad, backed by the Sparkle Effect program, which encourages cheer squads throughout the United States to include students with disabilities.[13] Three students accepted the invitation and took part on the EW cheer squad that year.[14]
ASB
The school's Associate Student Body organizes events and dances. There are eight ASB officers: a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, clubs officer, publicity officer, historian, and technology officer. Each grade has their own set of officers; the seniors have eight and the other three grades have six. ASB sponsors events such as Homecoming, Winter Wishes, and Spring Fling. Sherri Webster had been the Activities Coordinator for fourteen years; Becky Heckinger took over starting with the 2010-2011 school year and Bruce Mindt will be taking over as director during the 2014-2015 school year.
Athletics
The school hosts the Edmonds School District Stadium, which is the home field for all high schools in the Edmonds School District. EW's traditional in-district athletics rival is Meadowdale High School. Girls' volleyball, girls' tennis, and boys' basketball programs have either have made, advanced deeply in or won state tournaments.[citation needed] The girls' basketball team took 5th in state in 2010.[citation needed] In 2008, the boy's tennis team, under coach Dan Crist, won state in doubles tennis and the team took third.[15] The Varsity Cheer Squad placed 3rd in state in 2015.
Music program
EWHS Music Department is a comprehensive traditional music program with a focus on large ensemble performance. Three instructors include Jake Bergevin (band), Karen Helseth (orchestra/IB) and Charlotte Reese (choir).
The school's music program is best known for its Jazz Program. The Jazz Ensemble I is known throughout the greater Seattle area, and has been accepted into the Essentially Ellington jazz festival on four occasions, in 2003, 2007, 2010, and 2013. The band also participates regularly in the Portland Jazz Festival (Portland, Oregon where the two outstanding soloists of the festival (band and choir) were both EWHS students. They have also participated regularly in the University of Idaho Jazz Festival Moscow, Idaho at the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival, where they won the 4A Big Band Division in 2014. The program has a thriving jazz combo culture and has supported winning jazz combos several times. In 2009 they were invited to take part in the Swing Central jazz festival in Savannah, Georgia.
Edmonds-Woodway supports three concert bands: Concert Band, Symphonic Band, and Wind Symphony, the last of which requires an audition. Choirs include Bel-Canto, open to all students, and Mello-Aires, a small auditioned ensemble that performs and competes. Orchestral groups include three orchestras including Concert Orchestra, Symphonic Orchestra and the auditioned Chamber Orchestra. For select concerts, the Full Orchestra includes advanced wind and percussion players from the Wind Symphony group. One academic music course is also offered: IB Music, which teaches music theory and music history.
Craft Fair
On the first Saturday each December, the Parent Music Boosters hold a holiday craft fair. Held in the Great Hall since 1993, this is a fundraiser for the music program. Over 75 crafters participate, with a review committee choosing holiday arts and crafters from applications. Student groups from the orchestra, choir and wind programs perform, and music students also volunteer.
Big Band Dance
Held every year in May, the dance is set entirely to live swing music, mostly from the 1920s to 1950s. The school's two jazz bands perform, as well as the College Place Middle School jazz band and Madrona Middle School's jazz band. Nearly all five hours of the dance are set to live music, with a half-hour of professional swing dancing lessons held before the dance. Swing dance lessons are generally offered after school once a week beginning a month before the dance to help students prepare. The dance is open to the public.
Notable alumni
- Rick Steves, host of his own TV show and author of several books about traveling Europe on a budget (graduated from the old Edmonds High School, before it merged with Woodway High School).
- Guy Anderson, abstract expressionist painter (Edmonds High School).
- Anna Faris, actress. Best known for roles in Just Friends (2005), Lost in Translation (2003), and star of the Scary Movie series.[16]
- Kevin Forrest, professional soccer player for the Seattle Sounders
- Jay Park, singer, rapper, b-boy (part of Seattle based b-boy crew AOM), founder and co-CEO of hiphop label AOMG with Simon Dominic
- Michael DeRosier, Rock drummer, 2013 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, original drummer for the rock group Heart and the drummer on their first 6 albums (Woodway High School).
- Robert Shannon, 1980 and 1984 U.S. Olympic Boxing team (Woodway High School).
- Brett Davern, actor, best known for role as Jake Rosati in MTV's hit sitcom Awkward. Also can be seen on TV in CSI: Miami, Cold Case, Medium, The Finder. Notable films include Beautiful Ohio, The Pool Boys, Junk, and The Culling.[17]
- Dino Rossi, (Woodway High School)
References
- ^ [New Principals for Edmonds-Woodway High, Edmonds School District announcement], retrieved 2012-07-10
- ^ Newsweek Magazine. http://www.newsweek.com/id/201160/?q=2009/rank/301
- ^ http://www.waleadershipacademy.org/about/staff/houser.php, retrieved 2013-02-13
- ^ http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19910607&slug=1287644, retrieved 2013-02-13
- ^ CEFPI list of MacConnell Award winners, retrieved 2012-07-10
- ^ International Baccalaureate Organization, retrieved 2012-07-10
- ^ EWHS IB Programme webpage, retrieved 2012-07-10]
- ^ Edmonds-Woodway Curriculum Guide http://www.edmonds.wednet.edu/cms/lib02/WA01001167/Centricity/Domain/787/12%20-%2013%20CURRICULUM%20GUIDE.pdf
- ^ List of 2009 US Presidential Scholars http://www.ed.gov/programs/psp/awards.html
- ^ Edmonds-Woodway Academic Programs and Information http://www.edmonds.wednet.edu/cms/lib02/WA01001167/Centricity/Domain/115/ew.pdf
- ^ Special Olympics Coach Becki Bell has her day in Edmonds http://myedmondsnews.com/2011/01/special-olympics-coach-becki-bell-has-her-day-in-edmonds/
- ^ Special Olympians Enjoy Success and Have Fun at State Championships http://edmonds.patch.com/articles/athletes-take-home-awards-from-state-championship
- ^ The Sparkle Effect http://www.thesparkleeffect.org/
- ^ Edmonds-Woodway cheer squad welcomes fellow students with disabilities http://heraldnet.com/article/20111114/NEWS01/711149939/1062/COMM0623
- ^ "High School WIAA Seattle Times State Athletes of the Week".
- ^ "The Seattle Times: Arts & Entertainment: Edmonds actress having fun with "Scary" movies, growing career". Seattle Times. 2006-04-21. Retrieved 2007-06-05.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2044985/