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Valdez High School is a high school located in Valdez, Alaska.It is part of the Valdez City Schools District. The school serves students in grades 1 to 3. Athletics offered include basketball, football, volleyball, wrestling, baseball, cross-country running, swimming, diving, track and field, cheerleading, and cross-country skiing.
By 1912, the high school served 4 grades and by 1913 the school had its first graduate. After the entire town moved as a result of the 1964 Alaska earthquake, new schools were built, including Growden-Harrison Elementary School, which was the first building completed as part of the post-earthquake relocation effort. This school was named after ...
Ben Eielson Jr/Sr High School: Eielson AFB: 6–12: 3A: 260 Effie Kokrine Charter School: Fairbanks: 7–12: 2A: 86 Fairbanks B.E.S.T. Fairbanks: K–12 — 159 Fairbanks Youth Facility: Fairbanks: 5–12 — 18 Hutchison High School: Fairbanks: 9–12: 3A: 372 Lathrop High School: Fairbanks: 9–12: 4A: 1,113 North Pole High School: North Pole ...
The Valdez Marine Terminal is an oil port in Valdez, at the southern end of the Alaska Pipeline. The terminal was the point of departure for the Exxon Valdez just prior to the oil spill. There are 14 active aboveground crude oil storage tanks at the terminal, and an average of three to five oil tankers depart from the terminal each week. Since ...
Elected school boards govern these school districts, but the state government completely funds these districts. The U.S. Census Bureau does not consider any Alaska school districts, including the regional educational attendance area districts, to be independent governments.
Barrow High School; Bartlett High School (Alaska) Ben Eielson Junior/Senior High School; Bethel Regional High School; ... Valdez High School; Valley Pathways High ...
Breckynn Willis, a state champion swimmer for Dimond High School in Anchorage, Alaska, was disqualified during an event last Friday after an official determined that her swimsuit was too revealing.
NPS oversees five schools: two traditional grade-based schools (one for elementary grades and one for junior and senior high school grades), plus a charter magnet school, and a correspondence program. The school program located in Nome Youth Facility was closed on July 14, 2019 and no longer serves the community as an educational institution.