Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sky View High School (SVHS), is located in Smithfield, Utah. Sky View is the northernmost public high school in the state. As part of the Cache County School District , it serves approximately 1,300 students in grades 9 through 12.
Skyview High School is a high school in the Salmon Creek area of northern Vancouver, Washington. Opened in 1997, it is the second newest of seven high schools in the Vancouver School District . The building design incorporates an open classroom floor plan with the use of many windows and features a 10,000-square-foot (930 m 2 ) common area at ...
Skyview High School is a four-year public secondary school in Nampa, Idaho. Opened in 1996, it is the second of three traditional high schools operated by the Nampa School District #131. Skyview is on a block schedule, with students taking 4 classes on A day and 4 classes on B day.
Skyview junior outside hitter Alex Acevedo was voted the 4A all-state player of the year by Idaho coaches. ... Oct. 28, at Thunder Ridge High School in Idaho Falls. ...
Billings Skyview High School, also known as Billings Skyview or Skyview, is a four-year comprehensive public high school in Billings, Montana.The school serves approximately 1,600 students with 92.5 certified staff, 36 support staff and 10 custodians under principal Deb Black, associate principal Danette Cerise, and Deans Scott Lynch and Jay Wahl.
Skyview High School opened in 1989, and is the newest school on the Kenai Peninsula. It was built to relieve the over-crowded Soldotna High School. Skyview High School closed at the end of the 2013–2014 school year and the building was converted into Skyview Middle School. The student populations from Skyview and Soldotna High School were ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The district has 36 schools: 21 elementary schools (PK-Grade 5) 6 middle schools (Grades 6-8) 5 high schools (Grades 9 to 12) Vancouver High School stood for many years at the intersection of Columbia and West Fourth Plain Boulevard, but was closed in the mid-1950s, with students divided between two new schools: Fort Vancouver High School and Hudson's Bay High School.