Jump to content

West Lake Junior High

Coordinates: 40°41′57″N 111°58′28″W / 40.69917°N 111.97444°W / 40.69917; -111.97444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Westlake Junior High)
West Lake STEM Junior High
Address
Map
3400 South 3450 West

Granger

, ,
84120

Coordinates40°41′57″N 111°58′28″W / 40.69917°N 111.97444°W / 40.69917; -111.97444
Information
TypePublic Jr. High School
Motto"Try, fail, try again, until you succeed"
School districtGranite School District
SuperintendentBen Horsley
PrincipalSarah Wall
Grades78
Age range12-14
Average class size30
Hours in school day7:50 AM-2:45 Mon-Thurs; 7:50 AM-12:30 PM Fri
Classrooms64, 8 relocatable classrooms
CampusUrban/Suburban
Color(s)Gold & Black
Slogan"Learn Today Lead Tomorrow"
Song"Oh, West Lake"
SportsBoys Basketball, Girls Basketball, Boys Volleyball, Girls Volleyball, Wrestling, Boys Soccer, Girls Soccer, Boys Cross Country, Girls Cross Country, Boys Track, Girls Track
MascotMustang
Team nameMustangs
Website[1]

West Lake STEM Junior High or WLJH is a public junior high in West Valley City, Utah. It is located at 3400 South and 3450 West in the Granger region of West Valley City. The school belongs to the very large Granite School District, which covers a large portion of the Salt Lake Valley in Utah.

Background

[edit]

The school was built in 1964. Students who attend West Lake come from the area approximately bounded by 2100 South on the north, I-215 on the east, 3500 South on the south, and 4800 West on the west. The school is located in the heart of West Valley City. The school had 64 classrooms, including six relocatable classrooms and a Parent and Family Center. This will vary as construction begins on the new campus. West Lake is a Title One school[1] and receives additional funding from Highly Impacted Schools, Gear Up, and Schools for the 21st Century. These grants allow West Lake to reduce class size, offer after-school and summer programs, and additional opportunities for students, faculty, and community.

As of the 2020-2021 school year, the school has been relocated to a location known as the old campus for Westbrook Elementary due to severe earthquake damage on the main building. Due to damage done by the Magna earthquake, the building has been demolished and will be replaced by another building.[2] It is anticipated the new building will be ready August 2024. [3]

Enrollment

[edit]

West Lake serves approximately 800 students in grades 7–8.[4] Students come from many parts of the world, creating a rich diversity among our student body. A majority of the school staff is ESL endorsed and/ or trained in Sheltered English Strategies. There have been as many as 31 different languages spoken by the students and families of West Lake Jr. High. Even the teachers at WLJH represent the multicultural makeup of West Lake, as many of them have cultural backgrounds outside the United States.

Computers and Technology

[edit]

West Lake has a computer network system that is accessed by every classroom in the building. The Media center is a central lab that can be used by all students for research, with access to online information and many other library systems. The school has a series of labs throughout the building designed to enhance the curriculum and are also used for testing purposes. They have three laptop computer carts (with wireless Internet access) that teachers can check out and use in their classroom. West Lake has a small studio where student video broadcasts are created and shown during the morning announcements. They have grades, attendance and student information on the Internet for parents. Parents can come to the Parent and Family Center and access their student's grade and attendance information.

Promotion

[edit]

Students of West Lake continue to either Hunter High School or Granger High School.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Utah identifies highest- and lowest-performing Title 1 schools," Salt Lake Tribune, October 1, 2015
  2. ^ "The New West Lake".
  3. ^ "West Lake STEM Junior High School rebuilds after earthquake | Taylorsville Journal".
  4. ^ "Several Utah high schools moving to 4-year format," Deseret News, May 25, 2012
[edit]