Madison West High School
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Established | 1930 |
---|---|
Type | Public secondary |
Principal | Ed Holmes |
Students | approx. 2,300 (2006-2007) |
Grades | 9–12 |
Location | Madison, Wisconsin, USA |
Oversight | Madison Metropolitan School District |
Colors | Maize and Blue |
Mascot | Reggie the Regent (A lion) |
Newspaper | 'Regent Review' |
Website | http://www.madison.k12.wi.us/west/ |
Madison West High School is one of four comprehensive four-year high schools in Madison, Wisconsin. It was established in 1930. Its mascot is the "Reggie the Regent," a lion, and its school colors are maize and blue. Athletics compete in the WIAA Big Eight Conference.
Contents |
Administration
- Principal: Ed Holmes
- Assistant Principals: Lee Callaway, Theresa Calderon, Beth Tompson, Mitch McGrath
Advanced Placement
Madison West features Advanced Placement classes such as:
- World Languages: French Language, Spanish Language, Latin Language
- History: American Government & Politics
- Mathematics: Statistics, AB Calculus, BC Calculus, Computer Science A, Computer Science AB
Students
Madison West High School's students come from various social, economic, and cultural backgrounds; however, the majority are from business and professional families. West's student population is 39% non-white, compared to 10% for Madison as a whole. Students at West come from Cherokee, Hamilton, and Wright Middle Schools, in addition to various other schools across the district.
Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The emo band Jimmy Eat World filmed the music video for their song, "Work," at West High in 2005.
- The Madison West Boys Cross Country team, led by seniors Andrew Han, Robert Joynt, Eric Lewandowski, Benjamin Swimm, and David Yu, won the team's first State Cross Country Championship under head coach Tom Kaufman in 2005. The team placed 5th at the 2006 meet, led by Corey Watts (Sr.), William Bradley (Sr.), James Marsh (Sr.) Andrei Baiu (Jr.), Brett Kelly (Fr.), Scott Klasek (Jr.), and Birken Schimpf (Fr.).
- Since its inception in 1983, competing every year, the Madison West Science Olympiad team has placed no worse than second in the Wisconsin State Science Olympiad Tournament (Division C). The West team had placed first in Wisconsin for 8 years in a row, until 2008, when they were defeated due to disqualification in the Ecology event. The West team has also had success at the national tournament by placing in the top 10 in 3 consecutive years from 1989 to 1991 including 2nd in 1989.
Notable alumni
- Tammy Baldwin - U.S. Representative (D-WI)[2]
- Blake Becker - professional triathlete[3]
- Jim Doyle - 44th Governor of Wisconsin (2003-?)[4]
- Erich Eichman - Editor, Wall Street Journal[citation needed]
- Reece Gaines - Orlando Magic (2003-2004), Houston Rockets (2004-2005), Milwaukee Bucks (2004-2006)[5]
- Beth Heiden - Olympian, 1980 Winter Olympic Games, and professional cyclist
- Eric Heiden - Olympian, 1980 Winter Olympic Games, and professional cyclist, 1986 Tour de France
- Phil Hellmuth - professional poker player[6]
- Peter Koechley - Managing Editor, The Onion [7]
- Cyrus Nowrasteh filmmaker
- Donnel Thompson - Pittsburgh Steelers (2000), Indianapolis Colts (2002)
- Stu Voigt - Minnesota Vikings (1970-1980)
- Ben Wikler - Former producer for Al Franken on Air America Radio [7]
- Jesse Laz-Hirsch - Lead vocals, rhythm guitar for Locksley
- Kai Kennedy - Lead guitar for Locksley
- Aaron Collins - Bass guitar for Locksley
- Sam Bair - Drums for Locksley
- Leo Sidran - Musician
- David Richard - Prominent Chef Specializing In Fresh Ground Pepper
- Chris Tallman - Actor
References
- ^ http://www.madison.k12.wi.us/west/ Infobox data validation.
- ^ Tammy Baldwin's personal website (HTML). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
- ^ Mertz, Adam. "A Run Of Beginners' Luck", The Capital Times, Madison.com, 2007-01-19. Retrieved on 2003-05-26.
- ^ Milwaukee Journal Sentinal Jim Doyle article including West attendance (ASPX). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
- ^ Basketball-Reference.com entry for Reece Gaines (HTML). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
- ^ Moe, Doug. "A Poker Story, A Madison Story", The Capital Times, Madison.com, 2006-07-22. Retrieved on 2006-12-07.
- ^ a b Conklin, Melanie "From Yellow to Golden", madison.com, 'The Wisconsin State Journal (HTML). Retrieved on 2006-12-07.