Eastlake High School (Sammamish, Washington)

Eastlake High School
Main entrance in 2005
Location
Map
400 228th Avenue Northeast

,
Information
TypePublic, four-year
MottoWolf Strong Pack Strong
Established1993
School districtLake Washington S.D.
PrincipalTodd Apple
Faculty110.38 (on an FTE basis)[1]
Grades9–12 (10–12 until Sep 2012)
Enrollment2,349 (2022–23)[1]
Student to teacher ratio21.28[1]
CampusSmall Town
Color(s)Crimson, gray and white
      [2]
AthleticsWIAA Class 4A
Athletics conferenceKingCo 4A,
Crown Division
MascotWolf
NewspaperWolves Weekly Update
Feeder schoolsEvergreen Middle School
Inglewood Middle School
Timberline Middle School
Websiteehs.lwsd.org

Eastlake High School is a four-year public high school in Sammamish, Washington, a suburb east of Seattle. Opened in 1993, it is one of four traditional high schools in the Lake Washington School District, serving its eastern portion. It is only one of two schools in the Lake Washington School District that is accredited.[3]

Eastlake shares its campus with the Renaissance School of Art and Reasoning.[4]

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Cafeteria, Eastlake High School, Sammamish, Washington

Eastlake is one of three high schools on the Sammamish Plateau, all close in proximity along 228th Avenue. Skyline High School, in the Issaquah School District, opened in 1997 and is about 1-mile (1.6 km) south of Eastlake. Between the two public high schools is Eastside Catholic, a private secondary school that relocated to Sammamish in 2008.

In the fall of 2012, Lake Washington School District converted its four senior high schools (grades 10–12) to four-year schools (grades 9–12), moving the freshman class for the first time from the Jr. High to the district's High School.[5]

  1. ^ a b c "Eastlake High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved June 1, 2024.
  2. ^ "Eastlake High School". Washington Interscholastic Athletic Association. Retrieved 2024-04-27.
  3. ^ "AESD Accredited Schools | Washington Association of Educational Service Districts".
  4. ^ "Transportation - Renaissance Middle School". rsar.lwsd.org. Retrieved 2024-05-18.
  5. ^ Stevens Decker, Mary (2010-09-28). "Population growth, school district reconfiguration to cause overcrowding in middle schools, high schools". Redmond Reporter. Retrieved 2024-05-18.