La Pine Senior High School

Coordinates: 43°40′33″N 121°30′22″W / 43.675801°N 121.506091°W / 43.675801; -121.506091
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
La Pine Senior High School
Address
Map
51633 Coach Road

, ,
97739

Coordinates43°40′33″N 121°30′22″W / 43.675801°N 121.506091°W / 43.675801; -121.506091
Information
TypePublic
Opened1979
School districtBend-La Pine School District
PrincipalMatt Montgomery[1][2]
Staff17.68 (FTE)[3]
Grades9-12
Number of students432 (2018-19)[3]
Student to teacher ratio24.43[3]
Color(s)Blue and gold   [1]
Athletics conferenceOSAA 3A-5[1]
MascotHawk[1]
WebsiteLa Pine SHS website

La Pine Senior High School, called La Pine High School, is a public high school in La Pine, Oregon, United States.

Academics[edit]

In 2008, 70% of the school's seniors received a high school diploma. Of 124 students, 87 graduated, 26 dropped out, and 11 were still in high school in 2009.[4][5]

Athletics[edit]

In 2015, the La Pine wrestling team took the league championships, were the 3A special district 3 dual championships, took second in state as a team, had 14 state placers two state champions tommy gallamore and Derrick Kerr

In 2018, the La Pine Hawks baseball team won the 3A state championship. Coach Bo DeForest led the team to the 4 seed where the Hawks played Horizon Christian in the championship game, winning 10-5. Catcher and Pitcher Wyatt DeForest was honored with the Moda Health Player of the Game

In 2019, the La Pine hawks won their second 3A state championship in a row for baseball. After gaining the 4 seed Coach Bo DeForest led the Hawks to a 8-1 win over Warrenton. Pitcher Adam Plant won the Moda Health Player of the Game.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "OSAA - Error".
  2. ^ "Oregon School Directory 2008-09" (PDF). Oregon Department of Education. p. 139. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-26. Retrieved 2009-05-28.
  3. ^ a b c "LaPine Senior High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  4. ^ "State releases high school graduation rates". The Oregonian. 2009-06-30. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  5. ^ "Oregon dropout rates for 2008". The Oregonian. 2009-06-30. Archived from the original on 2011-09-16. Retrieved 2009-07-01.