In 2010 Juanita began admitting lower ninth grade students, in addition to the school's previous student body of grades ten through twelve due to overcrowding in the district. In 2014 Juanita won its fourth Washington Achievement Award Special Recognition for its extended graduation rate. In 2017 six Juanita students were awarded "Top in the Country" honors in the Cambridge Assessment. In 2018 and 2019, seven and two students were earned the same title in 2018 and 2019, respectively. From 2020 to 2022 the National Parent Teacher Association designated Juanita High School as a school of excellence. In 2021 Juanita student Caroline Yim was honored by the
International Thespian Society with a $35,000
Grace Kelly Scholarship for scenic design in the play
The Hound of the Baskervilles. In 2021 a Juanita junior, Ria Mohan, and member of Future Health Professionals (
HOSA) won first place honors in the state and international HOSA Leadership Conferences. Her research,
How Can the Menstrual Health of Women & Teens in Homeless Shelters be Improved?, was done in partnership with a Seattle nonprofit that hosts menstrual product donation drives for homeless women. Mohan and another Juanita student, Pragnya Gudipati, won the 2021
T-Mobile Changemaker Challenge, a grant for $5,000, to develop a diagnostic tool to check for
Tuberculosis (TB) with an at-home
urinalysis stick called "Tuberculosticks."
Biotechnology program In 1996 biology teacher Jeanne Chowning started western Washington's first
biotechnology course at Juanita. The course was developed in a science education partnership with the
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center (FHCC) that provides students with workshops and summer internships at the HutchLab,
Amgen,
ZymoGenetics,
Seattle Biomedical Research Institute, and the
University of Washington's (UW) department of
Genome Sciences and the Molecular and Cellular Biology graduate program. Chowning worked with biology teacher Mary Glodowski, who taught the course at Juanita, to develop the curriculum. In 2001 Chowning, Glodowski, and other Juanita science teachers started the first annual Student Biotechnology Expo hosted by the Washington Biotechnology Foundation. In 2002, the Expo won the
Golden Apple Award.
PBS highlighted Chowning, Glodowski, and one of her students, Matt Winkler, in the publication of the award. In 2003 Glodowski won the Amgen Award for Science Teaching Excellence, and in 2007, Glodowski won the
Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching, primarily for her work on Juanita's biotechnology program. Between 2002 and 2004 some students in Juanita's biotechnology program worked with genome research scientists at UW on the
Human Genome Project, and isolated a segment of the sequenced DNA as part of UW's High School Human Genome Project. The work contributed to research and curriculum. In 2006, Juanita won the first ever Judges' Award of Excellence cup at the Biotechnology Expo, hosted by the Northwest Association for Biomedical Research. In 2014 LWSD opened a
Capstone course in partnership with
EvergreenHealth at Juanita in the field of
global health. The STEM Signature Program, adopted from
Tesla STEM High School's curriculum, requires the biotechnology class in a series with
English and
anatomy/
physiology. The capstone project involves the diagnosis of a possible case of
Tuberculosis. The program also offered opportunities to shadow healthcare workers. Juanita continues to partner with FHCC in its biotechnology program through the Fred Hutch High School Pathways Explorers Program and the Fred Hutchinson Summer High School Internship. == Sports and extra-curricular activities ==