Chehalis School District No. 302 | |
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Address | |
310 SW 16th Street Chehalis , Lewis, Washington, 98532 | |
Coordinates | 46°39′4″N122°57′1″W / 46.65111°N 122.95028°W |
District information | |
Grades | Pre-K through 12 |
Superintendent | Rick Goble (acting) [1] |
Deputy superintendent(s) | Dr. Brian D. Fox |
Schools | 6 |
Budget | $46,843,371 [2] |
NCES District ID | 5301170 [3] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 3,259 [4] |
Teachers | 167 [4] |
Staff | 77 [4] |
Student–teacher ratio | 17.92 [4] |
District mascot | Bearcats |
Other information | |
Website | chehalisschools |
Chehalis School District No. 302 is a public school district in Lewis County, Washington, United States, and serves the city of Chehalis. Chehalis is on the I-5 corridor, halfway between Seattle, Washington, and Portland, Oregon.
One of the first schools in the district was the East Side School, a high school located near the downtown core. In 1908, due to inadequate facilities and concerns of its location, the building was sold and was used for a time as a city hall. [5]
By the early 1910s, the schools in Chehalis School District No. 3, particularly the South Ward and West Side schools, were considered overcrowded and the city began to form ideas to construct new school buildings. During this time, students were required to attend certain schools based on neighborhood locations in relation to the railroad tracks that crossed the city, due to concerns over the dangers of walking over the railways. [6] [7]
The previous primary schools, Cascade (built 1922), R.E. Bennet (opened 1928), and Olympic (built 1960) [8] were replaced new elementary schools which were built simultaneously in 2018 and fully opened to all students in 2019. [9]
Due to age and structural issues in and outside of both Cascade and R.E. Bennet, [10] the school district first proposed a bond measure to fund replacing Cascade and modernizing R.E. Bennett in 2011. [11] The measure, tallying less than 53% of the vote, failed to pass due to a lack of a supermajority. [12] In 2014, Chehalis resident Gail Shaw betrothed the district with 43 acres of land near the Chehalis Middle School. Valued at $1.9 million, the land was meant to be used as the location of a new school to replace Cascade Elementary. [13]
By February 2015, Chehalis voters, by a 62% margin, approved a $35.9 million bond for the schools. [14] The following year, the school board voted to name the two new elementary schools that replaced R.E. Bennett, Cascade and Olympic in honor of James W. Lintott and Orin C. Smith. The campus was named for the Shaw family. [15]
Prior superintendents include Ed Rothlin, who retired in 2020, followed by Dr. Christine Moloney, serving until 2024. [1]
Previously, elementary students in the public school system in Chehalis attended Cascade Elementary School for kindergarten and first grade, R.E. Bennett Elementary School for second and third grades, and Olympic Elementary School for fourth and fifth grades. [16] Both the Bennett and Cascade schools were designed by Jacque “Jack” DeForest Griffin, an influential architect in 1920s Chehalis, specifically in the Chehalis Downtown Historic District. [17] [18]
Pre-kindergarten to 2nd grade.
Opened in 2019 for students between the 3rd and 5th grades, the school was named for Orin Smith, former CEO of Starbucks, who made significant financial contributions to Chehalis, Washington education system. [16] [19] [20] During the 2023–24 school year, there were 47 teachers on staff, with 659 enrolled students. The student population met Washington state standards of 55.8% for science, 49.1% for English language arts and a 47.5% rate for math. [21]
The school mascot is the Cougars, represented by the colors crimson and gray, similar to the high school. [22]
The boy's basketball team won the 1922 state title when the team for Toppenish High School conceded the championship to Chehalis without playing the final game. [23]
In November 2006, the district had an enrollment of 2,596 students.[ citation needed ], and 2,791 students in a May 2015 report. [24] The Chehalis School District reported an enrollment of 3,053 students in 2018, [25] with a trend of slightly lower numbers following a register of 3,027 students in 2020 and 2,987 in 2023. [4]
Based on a study initiated by the district, it was reported that only 20% of Chehalis students in the early 2010s were achieving a 4-year college degree. [26] The CSD implemented a plan in 2013–2014, referred to as the Student Achievement Initiative (SAI), that within 8 years of graduating, 60% of the students would receive a degree or certification from a technical training program or college. [27] To achieve the goal, all seniors in high school were to submit an application for acceptance to Centralia College. Coupled with field trips to Centralia College, this allowed the district to achieve high rates of graduation, college admission, and career opportunities for the students. Officials and teachers in elementary and middle schools created programs to emphasize future college and employment opportunities by holding job assemblies, "swag days" for local and state schools of technical and university education, and "college-themed days". [28] In its first three years, the SAI improved the rate of students eligible for a four-year college by 8 percentage points. [26]
The graduation rate for students at W.F. West High School in 2010 was 77%, with 33% of those students achieving admission into a university or training school/ [28] In 2018, 73% of seniors who graduated went on to further higher education. [29] A four-year stretch started in 2019 in which 100% of all graduating senior classes were accepted into college. [30] In 2019, the four-year graduation rate was 95%, bettering the state average by 14 points. [29] The rate increased to 96% in 2022. [28]
A Civil Rights Data Collection report from the Department of Education for the district's 2020–2021 school year listed that over 70% of the student body was classified as being White, almost 21% as Latino or of Hispanic heritage, less than 2% were Black students, and below 1% each for Native American, Pacific Islander, and Asian enrollees. Less than 3% of pupils were held back a grade and no reports of bullying, harassment, or students with disabilites being restrained. The report also states that there is one counselor for every 444 students. The collection for the district, which begins in 2011, has shown a slight but noticeable increase in inclusivity and lower ratios of students to staff. [31]
The CSD offers an education program, known as VISIONS, for students with various disabilities between the ages of 18 and 21. The program, begun in the early 1990s, [32] is considered an extension of the high school curriculum and provides continuing education and experiences so that participants can be better equipped for independence in adulthood. Operating under the district, it partners with school districts in the county as well as other educational projects and initiatives. The students officially receive their high school diploma at completion of the program. [33] Students are given vocational training which includes education on social interactions, employment and job tasks, and practical living skills. The VISIONS program partners with staffing services to provide students, both enrolled and graduated, a match with local jobs and living facilities best suited for them. [32]
The district began the Cornerstone Program in 2023 to provide parents and young students, particularly pre-kindergarten, resources to better prepare for early education. The program was additionally developed to increase early skills proficiency in a variety of measures and to better connect families to school staff, procedures, and community support as their children transition to school. [34]
The SAI was originally funded by donations from the community via the Chehalis Foundation. It included several large contributions made by hometown citizens of note, [26] and a $10 million contribution from Orin C. Smith, who graduated from the high school in 1960. [35] Originally, the early funding was meant for scholarships, but concerns that college assistance was not enough, the foundation and the SAI turned to a more comprehensive plan to prepare students for college based on education, experience, and preparedness. [26] The fund is perpetual, and is able to pay out $500,000 per year. [35] [36]
The district, in 2022, was awarded a grant of over $1,000,000 from the Washington Student Achievement Council. The funds are to be used to reach out to parents and young children, particularly at-risk students. [27]
Funding for Green Hill School is provided in full by the state of Washington. [37]
Lewis County is a county in the U.S. state of Washington. As of the 2020 census, the county's population was 82,149. The county seat is Chehalis, and its largest city is Centralia. Lewis County comprises the Centralia, WA Micropolitan Statistical Area, which is also included in the Seattle-Tacoma, WA Combined Statistical Area.
Chehalis is a city in and the county seat of Lewis County, Washington, United States. The population was 7,439 at the time of the 2020 census.
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Onalaska is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Lewis County, Washington, United States. As of the 2020 census it had a population of 657. Onalaska is located along Washington State Route 508.
William F. West High School, commonly referred to as W. F. West, is a public high school in Chehalis, Washington, United States. It is the only high school in the Chehalis School District. It was named for local businessman William F. West, who donated money and land to the school district. The school prides itself in the amount of scholarships given out yearly. Many students travel out of district to attend. The school added a brand new science wing in 2018.
Orin C. Smith was an American businessman who was president and chief executive officer (CEO) of Starbucks Corporation from 2000 to 2005. He joined Starbucks as vice president and chief financial officer in 1990, becoming president and chief operating officer in 1994, and a director of Starbucks in 1996. He was preceded by Howard Schultz and succeeded by Jim Donald who was himself succeeded by Schultz.
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Forest is an unincorporated community in Lewis County, in the U.S. state of Washington. It is located on Jackson Highway, between the Port of Chehalis and Washington State Route 508.
Parks and recreation in Chehalis, Washington is administered by the Chehalis Parks and Recreation Department. Trails that connect Chehalis with locations beyond the city limits are maintained in conjunction with other local jurisdictions, state government agencies, and/or local non-profit groups and volunteers.
The Recreation Park Complex is located in Chehalis, Washington in the city's South Market district near the Green Hill School. The venue, also known as the Chehalis Sports Complex, contains four distinct parks within its borders, providing recreation for athletics, walking, swimming, and playground activities.
Westside Park is located in Chehalis, Washington in the city's Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District which was catalogued on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1991.
Stan Hedwall Park is the largest park in Chehalis, Washington at 204-acres. It is located west of I-5, and southeast of Lintott-Alexander Park and the beginning trailhead for the Willapa Hills Trail.
Millett Field is the oldest, continuously used public park in Chehalis, Washington and is most noted as home to a Chehalis minor-league baseball team in the early 20th century. The ballfield was regularly used as the central hub of Chehalis sporting activity for decades, including hosting games for several Negro League teams in the 1920s. Located in the city's South Market district, one block north of the NRHP-listed O. B. McFadden House, the 3.3-acre (1.3 ha) park began in 1898.
Lintott-Alexander Park is a 6-acre (2.4 ha) park in Chehalis, Washington, located west of I-5 and south of Washington State Route 6. Due to its location in a bend of the Chehalis River and at the confluence of the Newaukum River, the park can flood in most years.
Mary's Corner is an unincorporated community located in Lewis County, Washington. The area sits at the crossroads of U.S. Route 12 and Jackson Highway. The community is 11 miles (18 km) south of Chehalis and 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the town of Ethel.
The Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District is a neighborhood located in Chehalis, Washington and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) since 1991. The district is one of three NRHP neighborhoods in the city, including the Chehalis Downtown Historic District and the Hillside Historic District. The city of Chehalis recognizes a much broader and expansive historic district, known under such monikers as the Historic West Side or the Westside neighborhood, with the inclusion of several other homes and streets.
The St. Helens Hotel, also known as the St. Helens Inn, is located in Chehalis, Washington and has been registered on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) since 1991. The historic hotel is situated on the south end of the Chehalis Downtown Historic District, an NRHP-listed district.
Barbara Feigin is an advertising executive and World War II refugee. She worked for several ad companies, gaining rights for maternity leave as well as career advancement regardless of her gender, while running strategic planning and market research campaigns. Feigin led efforts to create the teenage drunk driving advertisement, Friends don't let friends drive drunk. She is recognized as the first woman to be a major advertising executive in the United States.