River Ridge High School (Lacey, Washington)

Last updated
River Ridge High School
LowresRRcrest.jpg
Address
River Ridge High School (Lacey, Washington)
350 River Ridge Dr. SE

,
98513

United States
Coordinates 47°03′23″N122°45′05″W / 47.056411°N 122.751431°W / 47.056411; -122.751431
Information
Type Public secondary
MottoLearning to Live, Living to Learn, Learning to Soar
Established1993
CEEB code 480574
PrincipalSerenity Malloy
Staff71.80 (FTE) [1]
Grades9–12
Enrollment1,423 (2018-19) [1]
Student to teacher ratio19.82 [1]
Campussuburban
Color(s)Navy, Silver & White
   
MascotHawks
NewspaperThe Hawkeye
YearbookEpic (1993-2004)
The Raptor (since 2005)
Feeder schools Nisqually Middle School
Salish Middle School [2]
Website Homepage
River Ridge HS Lacey sign.jpg

River Ridge High School (RRHS), commonly referred to as Ridge, is a public high school located in Lacey, Washington, United States and is one of three comprehensive high schools of the North Thurston Public Schools. It was established in 1993 and named for its proximity to the geographical ridge of the Nisqually River valley. It earned its school nickname due to its location within the Hawk's Prairie area of Thurston County off Exit 111 of Interstate 5, serving students living in Mushroom Corner and Tanglewilde-Thompson Place.

Contents

River Ridge and its feeder school, Nisqually Middle School, serves many students with parents who are on active duty or have retired from the military due to its proximity to Joint Base Lewis-McChord. [3] River Ridge was constructed as a community solution to handle the over-flowing capacities of neighboring Timberline and North Thurston High Schools in the late 1980s-early 1990s, producing a more diverse student body population than the other two high schools in the district. [4]

History

Campus

Front plaza RRfront2.jpg
Front plaza

River Ridge is a high school established in the Lacey area and was the first in the school district to carry on a unique house system of organizing classrooms, dubbed "school within a school": students were split into the four houses (Kalama [5] (A), Olympic(B), Cascade(C), and Durazno(D)) in which each house has its own office and administrative team. [4] [6] Other buildings served to house electives, athletics, library media center, and main administrative offices. The house system was discontinued in 2011, and house buildings currently group classrooms by academic discipline. There is also another complex near D house called Sommer hall; it currently has STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) classes.

A common criticism in the school's architectural layout is the use of breezeway to connect the seven buildings, which provides little protection from the Pacific Northwest weather. Renovations began in 2018 to add an auxiliary gymnasium where the junior varsity baseball field had previously been located. [7] Until 2000 the campus shared space with the experimental high school, New Century High School, which relocated as South Sound High School in 2001. [4]

Academics

Since its start until 2009, River Ridge has had Graduation Project as a required class for its seniors; this was before it became a mandatory statewide requirement in Washington. [8] Wood shop is not offered. In addition, three foreign language classes offered are Spanish, Japanese, and French (in order of enrollment). German was offered in the past. In addition, like most American high schools, many students choose to participate in Advanced Placement (AP) classes, allowing them to earn college credit in Calculus, Physics, Government, and World History among others.

College-bound students have opportunities to earn college credit during their tenure at RRHS. Like many schools in Washington State, River Ridge lets its students to participate in the Running Start program, allowing them to attend college classes while simultaneously satisfying high school graduation requirements. River Ridge Running Start participants attend nearby South Puget Sound Community College in its Tumwater or Hawks Prairie campuses or at Pierce College in Lakewood.

Career-minded students interested in a vocational education are able to attend classes at New Market Vocational Skills Center in Tumwater.

Graduation Ceremony

Every year River Ridge has a formal graduation ceremony held at the St Martin's Pavilion in Lacey WA.

2019 Graduation Ceremony Orchestra Performance - RRHS Orchestra Led by Peter Chambers

National Anthem - Elizabeth Donovan

Valedictorian Speech - Colin Mayo & Mathew Jenkins

"Not Only Just Ourselves" Speech - Jace Valente

2020 Graduation Ceremony- TBD Updated**

Activities

Arts

River Ridge has two choirs (Concert and Symphonic), two string orchestras, and three band classes (Concert Band, Wind Ensemble, and Jazz Ensemble). Pep Band is run through fall and winter for football and basketball. Since the 2008–09 school year, River Ridge hosts a taiko ensemble through The River Ridge Taiko Project. [9]

The River Ridge Theater Department, produces at least five works a year, including at least one full-length musical. There also is an annual student-produced and directed Student Works production, made solely of student created one act plays and dances. The Educational Theatre Association has named River Ridge an Outstanding School in 2004, the same year that Dr. James Koval and Carolyn Lint, the superintendent and assistant superintendent were awarded that 2004 Administrator's Award. [10]

Athletics

The River Ridge Hawks compete as a 3A-division member of the South Sound Conference in District 3 as organized by the WIAA. It was formerly aligned with the Narrows League as a 3A school from 1993 to 1999 and the Pac 9 League as a 4A school from 1999 to 2006. The Hawks use a version of East Carolina University's "E.C. Victory" as its fight song; it previously used "Indiana, Our Indiana".

The school's track team, under the lead of coach Phil Lonborg, has been known for winning league championships every year, Boy's District Championships in 2007 and 2009, and has won back to back Girls' State Track and Field Championships in 1994 and 1995. Girls' Basketball and Volleyball have also been very successful from 2003–2007. The baseball team has seen recent success as well by winning 2 league titles in 2004 & 2006, a district title in 2008, and have made three playoff appearances since 2004 including a 5th place state finish in 2006.[ citation needed ] In 2007, the Girls' Basketball team won the State 2A Championship while the Boys Basketball team went on to win 3rd place.[ citation needed ] 2008 marks the second consecutive year that both teams qualified for the state tournament.

State Championships [11]
SeasonSportNumber of ChampionshipsYear(s)
Fall0
Winter Basketball, girls3 official, 1 WBF2005*, 2007, 2008, 2010
Spring Track and Field, girls21994, 1995
other Dance/Drill12007 (Hip-hop)
Total6

*originally awarded 2nd place, revised to "won by fault" after Chief Sealth High School team stripped of first place, title is officially vacant

State Tournament runner-up results and appearances [11]

Academic State Championships

Notable alumni

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References

  1. 1 2 3 "River Ridge High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  2. "North Thurston public schools" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-16. Retrieved 2017-08-16.
  3. Students, community groups send love, treats and prayers to troops Accessed 10 November 2009
  4. 1 2 3 "Students at Thurston County's River Ridge High feel at ease in their 'family' of multiple cultures". The News Tribune Journal. 1999. Archived from the original on February 4, 2013. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
  5. "City of Kalama, Washington | History". Archived from the original on 2007-09-19. Retrieved 2007-09-17.
  6. "Education". www.nthurston.k12.wa.us.
  7. "Nthurston". www.nthurston.k12.wa.us.
  8. Complete a Culminating Project (Senior Project), Graduation Requirements, Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, Washington State
  9. River Ridge Taiko Project
  10. "2004 Annual Report" (PDF). www.edta.org.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. 1 2 "WIAA State Tournament History". Archived from the original on 2009-04-09. Retrieved 2009-04-09.