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Legacy High School is an alternative high school in Vancouver, Clark County, Washington. Legacy is the only alternative high school in the Evergreen Public Schools school district and has the lowest student enrollment. [2] Legacy High School's principal is Andy Schoonover. Legacy's school colors are green and black.
Evergreen School District No. 114 is a public school district in Clark County, Washington, and serves the city of Vancouver. As of 2024, the district has an enrollment of about 22,000 students. As of 2024, the district has an enrollment of about 22,000 students.
Vancouver Christian High School, Vancouver (1997–2012) Vancouver iTech Preparatory, ... Midway Alternative School, Oak Harbor(closed 2006) Oak Harbor High School, ...
Evergreen High School is located on a large plot of land that it shares with Cascade Middle School, Legacy High School (an alternative education facility), Burton Elementary School, McKenzie Stadium, and the school district warehouse and bus barn. Evergreen was originally built at the corner of 18th Street and 137th Avenue.
Henrietta Lacks Health and Bioscience High School, commonly known as HeLa (alternatively spelled He-La), is a high school located in Vancouver, Washington. It is the most recent high school built in the Evergreen Public Schools, and one of six high schools in the district. The school's colors are light blue, dark blue, and grey.
Paterson school is Niche’s number one standout middle school in Washington state. It received an A- with a 14:1 student-teacher ratio and under 200 K-8 students. Test scores show 57% of students ...
Union High School is an American public high school in Vancouver, Washington. It is part of the Evergreen Public Schools school district. While the campus is located within the proper city limits of Vancouver, it has a Camas area zip code. [2] The campus was completed in July 2007. [3] Union High School's principal is Gregg Brown.
Seton opened in 2009 with 30 Ninth graders and 11 tenth graders. It was the first Catholic high school in southwest Washington in 43 years. In Seton's second year, they had 84 students in three classes, Freshmen, Sophomore, and Junior. The third year, they had 119, with Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors attending. [1]