Shadow Ridge High School (Nevada)

Public school in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shadow Ridge High School is a public high school in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. It was established in 2002 and opened in August 2003. The first graduating class in the high school graduated in June 2005. The school is a part of Clark County School District.

Coordinates36.31884°N 115.21024°W / 36.31884; -115.21024
TypePublic
MottoFirst in Spirit, First in Pride
Established2002
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
Shadow Ridge High School
Location
5050 Brent Lane

,
89131

United States
Coordinates36.31884°N 115.21024°W / 36.31884; -115.21024
Information
TypePublic
MottoFirst in Spirit, First in Pride
Established2002
Principal
Traci Kannon[1]
Teaching staff
127.00 (on an FTE basis)[2]
Enrollment3,119 (2023-2024)[2]
Student to teacher ratio
25.56[2]
ColorsNavy, Gray
   
Team nameMustangs
RivalsArbor View High School
Websiteschools.ccsd.net/shadowridge
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Academics and accomplishments

  • In the 2009-2010 school year, twenty-nine students received the Presidential Award of Academic Excellence[3]
  • In the 2008-2009 school year, $1,560,000.00 in Governor Guinn Millennium Scholarships were awarded[4]
  • In the 2009-2010 school year, SRHS Air Force ROTC was designated as "Distinguished Unit."[3]
  • In the 2010-2011 school year, Shadow Ridge Science Bowl Team placed 7th out of 32 teams at the Nevada Regional Science Bowl Competition and received a prize check of $300.00.[5]

Advanced Placement classes

  • Students have the opportunity to take Advanced Placement courses sponsored by College Board to gain college credit before graduation. Classes offered include: Biology, Chemistry, U.S. Government, World History, U.S. History, Psychology, English Literature, English Language, Studio Art, Calculus, and Spanish Language. However, due to Clark County's budget cuts and financial difficulties,[6] AP classes have been largely limited due to the quota of 25 students needed to pilot each AP class. With the average class size being 30 students,[3] it is nearly unfeasible to garner enough students for an AP class. Participation in the AP program is largely voluntary and so AP class size turnouts tend to be low.
  • Through the Jumpstart Dual Credit High School Program, students may also take dual-enrollment courses which grant both graduation credits and CSN credits.[7]

Notable alumni

References

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