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Yakima School District No. 7 is a public school district in Yakima County, Washington, USA and serves the city of Yakima. As of May 2016, the district had an enrollment of 15,999 students. The student body was over three-quarters Latino in 2016. Four Latinos have been elected to the Yakima School Board since 1999. [2]
Dwight David Eisenhower High School (/ ˌ aɪ z ɪ n ˈ h aʊ. ər /) is located in Yakima, Washington, United States.It is named after U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower.It is one of five high schools in the Yakima School District, the others being Davis High School, Stanton Academy, Yakima Online, and Yakima Valley Technical Skills Center (YV-Tech). [2]
This is a complete list of school districts of in the state of Washington. School districts are classified as whether they operate high school or not. Additionally the state classifies them on they have at least 2,000 students, with the former being first class districts and the latter being second class districts. Joint school districts have territory in at least two counties. All school ...
The former Yakima police officer accused of killing his ex-wife at William Wiley Elementary School was a former Richland School District employee with a lengthy history of inappropriate behavior ...
Yakima Online High School; Outside the city: West Valley High School, in the West Valley School District, is a division 4A school with a student population of around 1,500. East Valley High School, just east of Terrace Heights on the city's eastern side, is in the East Valley School District. It is a 2A school with about 1,000 students.
East Valley High School, located in Yakima, Washington, is a high school that serves 830 students in grades 9–12. [1] From 2012 to 2016, the principal was Dorthea Say and from 2016 to 2021, Kayla Crowe. [ 2 ]
North Yakima High School (which was renamed Davis High School in 1957 when Eisenhower High School became the second senior high school in Yakima) began classes in 1884, and was housed in the Columbia Building. By 1896, the school's enrollment reached 40 students and classes were relocated to the Central School Building.
Yakima Valley College was founded in 1928 as Yakima Valley Junior College when the Yakima School District decided to create a junior college. The effort was led by Charles L. Littel, superindendent of the Yakima School District at the time. The school became the third junior college in Washington state when it opened on September 17, 1928.