Thunder Mountain High School

Thunder Mountain High School is one of three public high schools in Juneau, Alaska. It was opened for the 2008–2009 school year. In its first year in operation it served grades 9–11; the Juneau School District wanted seniors (grade 12) to finish at their existing high schools. Thunder Mountain High School is located in the Mendenhall Valley section of Juneau and draws most of its students from this area, although under an open enrollment policy, high school students anywhere in the district may attend any of the three high schools.[4]

Thunder Mountain High School
Thunder Mountain High School is at lower left in this aerial view of the Mendenhall Valley. The Brotherhood Bridge and Juneau International Airport are at right.
Address
Thunder Mountain High School
3101 Riverside Drive

,
99801

Coordinates58.3793877°N 134.5940657°W / 58.3793877; -134.5940657
Information
TypePublic
Established2008
School districtJuneau School District
PrincipalDaniel Larson[1]
Assistant PrincipalRhonda Hickok[2]
Grades9 to 12
Enrollment705[3] (2016)
Color(s)Blue
MascotFalcons
NicknameTMHS
WebsiteTMHS home page

In August 2009, TMHS became an official a member of the Alaska School Activities Association and competes inter-scholastically with other schools in the state in athletic events and academic activities. For athletics, Thunder Mountain is classified as 4A, which includes the largest high schools in the state.

As of 2016, 736 students are enrolled.[5] Thunder Mountain High School is physically located at 3101 Riverside Drive, Juneau, Alaska 99801.[6]

Sports

Fall Sports:

Football, Football Cheer, Cross Country Running, Tennis, Swim/Dive, Volleyball, Dance, Rifle, Drama Debate and Forensics, Robotics, Wrestling.

Winter Sports:

Basketball, Basketball Cheer, Pep Band.

gollark: I suppose so.
gollark: Well, my computer actually also emits electromagnetic radiation.
gollark: No, they contain transistors, which are *active* components.
gollark: Idea: resistors as monoids.
gollark: Capacitors are just complex resistors.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.