Pagosa Springs High School

Pagosa Springs High School is a public high school located in Pagosa Springs, Colorado, United States. It is a part of Archuleta County School District 50-JT.

Pagosa Springs High School
Address
800 South Eighth Street

,
Colorado
81147

United States
Coordinates37°15′21″N 107°1′1″W
Information
School typePublic high school
School districtArchuleta 50JT
CEEB code061135
NCES School ID080219000039[1]
PrincipalSean O'Donnell[2]
Teaching staff29.33[1]
Grades912
Enrollment435 (2020-2021[1])
Student to teacher ratio14.83[1]
Color(s)Black and gold
  
Athletics conferenceCHSAA
MascotPirate
Feeder schools
  • Pagosa Springs Middle School
Websitehigh.mypagosaschools.com

The district includes most of Archuleta County.[3] A portion is in Hinsdale County, where it serves Piedra.[4]

History

Pagosa Springs High School moved into their current building in 1998.[5]

Athletics

Teams

Pagosa Spring's athletic teams are nicknamed the Pirates and the school's colors are black, white, and gold. Pagosa Springs teams compete in the following sports:

  • Baseball
  • Boys' basketball
  • Boys' golf
  • Boys' soccer
  • Cross country
  • Football
  • Girls' basketball
  • Girls' soccer
  • Swimming
  • Track
  • Volleyball

State championships

  • Boys basketball
    • 1960 Colorado Class B State Champions[6][7]
    • 2013 Colorado Class 3A State Champions[8]
  • Girls basketball
    • 2015 Colorado Class 3A State Champions[9]

Demographics

69% of the student population at Pagosa Springs High School identify as Caucasian, 15% identify as Hispanic, 12% identify as American Indian/Alaskin Native, 2% identity as Asian, 1% identify as multiracial, 0.5% identify as African American, and 0.2% identify as Hawaiian Native/Pacific Islander. The student body makeup is 51% male and 49% female.[10]

In 2018 some families dissatisfied with the schools of Dulce Independent Schools in Dulce, New Mexico enrolled their children in Archuleta school district schools. There were 31 students going to Pagosa Springs High from the Dulce area. Linda Reed, the superintendent, stated "people have been doing that for years."[11]

References

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