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Lakeside School (Seattle)

Lakeside School is an independent, co-educational day school located in Seattle, Washington. It enrolls approximately 900 students in grades 5 through 12, and is divided into a Middle School and an Upper School.

History
The Moran-Lakeside School was established as an independent preparatory school for boys in 1919 by Frank G. Moran on the shores of Lake Washington in the Denny-Blaine neighborhood of Seattle. The school was intended to feed students to Moran's other school, the Moran School on nearby Bainbridge Island. The school was incorporated in 1923 by a group of parents and renamed to Lakeside Day School. It moved a year later to the present site of The Bush School in Washington Park. Initially, the Lakeside campus was used by older students from both schools while the St. Nicholas campus was used by younger students. Three new buildings were constructed at Lakeside to complete the full merger. == Academics ==
Academics
Lakeside has an average class size of 17 students, and most humanities classes utilize the Harkness method. Classes are graded with a mixture of a standard letter grading system and a 4-point grading system, in which an A is worth 4.3 points and an F is worth 2 points. The school does not offer Advanced Placement nor International Baccalaureate courses, stating that their "academic program is designed by our talented educators for our unique student body". Students who attend Lakeside are required to take courses in English, mathematics, science, history, foreign languages, physical education, health and human development, and the arts. They must also complete a one-week outdoor program and at least 80 hours of community service. Students may independently study subjects in the form of investigations under the supervision of a faculty member. == Student life ==
Student life
Lakeside has over 90 official clubs. The upper school's official newspaper is the Tatler, which additionally runs Imago, a literary arts publication. Lakeside has affinity groups for various religious, sexual, racial, and ethnic identities, including BSU (Black Student Union), GLOW (Gay Lesbian Or Whatever, a gay-straight alliance club), LAPS (Lakeside Asian/Pacific Islander Students), MIXED (Multicultural Initiators EXperiencing and Encouraging Diversity), and LATISPA (a support network for Latin American students). Several of its clubs such as its Chess Team participate in extracurricular competitions and events, including Model United Nations, Quiz Bowl, Ethics Bowl, Science Bowl, VEX Robotics, and Science Olympiad. == Athletics ==
Athletics
Lakeside's athletic program offers golf, football, soccer, volleyball, crew, wrestling, baseball, basketball, ultimate frisbee, tennis, swim and dive, cross country, and track and field as well as a strength and conditioning program. In recent years, the boys' swim team won a 3A WIAA state championship in the 2011–2012 season, the 2012–2013 season, and the 2023–2024 season. The 2013-2014 boys' soccer team won the WIAA state championship in the 3A division. The 2014 girls' swim team won the 3A WIAA state championship for the first time in school history, and won the 2015 state championship as well. The 2016 volleyball team won the 3A WIAA state championship for the first time in school history. The 2021 girls' soccer team won the 3A WIAA state championship for the first time since 2003. ==Notable alumni==
Notable alumni
Wilber Huston (class of 1929), NASA mission director, Edison Scholar. • David "Ned" Skinner (class of 1937), former owner of Seattle Space Needle and the Seattle Seahawks. • Adam West (class of 1946), American film actor, played the original role of Batman in the 1960s TV Series. • Booth Gardner (class of 1954), former Governor of Washington state; former chair of the National Governors Association. • Edward Ferry (class of 1959), rower who won a gold medal for the coxed pair at the 1964 Summer Olympics. • Craig McCaw (class of 1968), founder of McCaw Cellular (now part of AT&T Mobility) and Clearwire Corporation. • Tor Seidler (class of 1968), author of "A Rat's Tale", "Mean Margaret" and "Gully's Travels". • Frederic Moll (class of 1969), co-founder of Intuitive Surgical, Hansen Medical, Mako Surgical, and Auris Surgical Robots. • Paul Allen (class of 1971), co-founder of Microsoft and Vulcan Inc.Ric Weiland (class of 1971), computer software pioneer and LGBT philanthropist. • Knute Berger (class of 1972), journalist and writer for Cascade PBS. • Hal Foster (class of 1973), art critic and historian. • Bill Gates (class of 1973), co-founder of Microsoft and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. and the 19th richest person in the world (2025) • Maria Eitel (class of 1980), first president of the Nike Foundation. • Annie Leonard (class of 1982), executive director of Greenpeace USA. • Alice Crary (class of 1985), philosopher and distinguished professor at The New School for Social Research. • Christopher Miller (class of 1993), American film director, writer, and producer (Project Hail Mary, How I Met Your Mother, The Lego Movie, and the Jump Street franchise). • Seth Gordon (class of 1994), film director, producer, screenwriter, and film editor (The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters, Four Christmases, Freakonomics, Horrible Bosses, Undefeated, Identity Thief, Baywatch). • Lauren Selig (class of 1994) film producer, entrepreneur and investor (Hacksaw Ridge, Lone Survivor, American Made). Daughter of Martin Selig. • Marjorie Liu (class of 1996), author and comic book writer (Monstress, NYX, X-23, Dark Wolverine, Astonishing X-Men). • Duncan Atwood, javelin thrower who qualified for the 1980 and 1984 Olympics. • Freddie Wong (class of 2004), filmmaker, musician, VFX artist and competitive gamer. • Daniel Kan (class of 2005), entrepreneur and founder and COO of Cruise Automation (acquired by General Motors for $1b). • Royce David (class of 2017), multi-platinum music producer. • Paul Rothrock (class of 2017), Major League Soccer player, forward for Seattle Sounders FC. • Corbin Carroll (class of 2019), baseball player, 2023 MLB All-Star and NL Rookie of the Year. ==References==
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