In 1982, Foss became the first high school in
Washington state to introduce the
International Baccalaureate Diploma Program (DP). In the spring of 2001, the school was selected by the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as an Achiever High School in Washington State. The school received a $9 million grant to restructure college preparation efforts, as well as an additional $100 million in scholarships. Among the efforts funded by these grants was a restructuring of the school into smaller "academies", a move unpopular with some faculty and students. In April 2004, a group of Foss sophomores threatened to boycott
Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL) standardized tests if the school board did not promise to retain pre-IB honors courses in English and history. The principal and school board promised to offer these honor classes in the academies, and the boycott was called off. However, the school ultimately removed the pre-IB classes and replaced them with Honors courses. In March 2006, the faculty voted by a 60-40 margin not to apply for a renewal of the Gates Foundation grant; those opposed argued that the grant "destroyed good programs" in the school, including the IB Program and the "team teaching" structure. Shortly after, Tacoma Schools Superintendent Jim Shoemaker directed the school's principal to override this decision and apply for a grant extension. On January 3, 2007, 17-year-old student Samnang Kok was shot in the school's hallway as classes were about to resume after Winter break. The 18-year-old student Douglas Chanthabouly was convicted of Kok's murder and was sentenced to 23 years in prison. On April 30, 2026, mass stabbing occured at Henry Foss High School in Tacoma, Washington. At least four students and a security guard were injured, four seriously. The suspect, also injured, has been taken into custody. The school remains in lockdown. The stabbing was sparked by an incident involving a
vape battery. ==Traditions==