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Bloomington Jefferson High School

Thomas Jefferson Senior High School
Bloomingtonpubliclogo.png
Address
4001 West 102nd Street
Bloomington, Minnesota 55437
United States
Coordinates 44°49′04″N 93°19′53″W / 44.8179°N 93.3313°W / 44.8179; -93.3313Coordinates: 44°49′04″N 93°19′53″W / 44.8179°N 93.3313°W / 44.8179; -93.3313
Information
Type Public secondary
Established 1970
Principal Jaysen Anderson
Number of students 1,680
Color(s) Columbia Blue, Silver, and White
              
Athletics Metro West Conference
Nickname Jaguars
Website

Thomas Jefferson Senior High School is one of the two high schools in Bloomington, Minnesota, USA Independent School District No. 271. It is located on at 102nd Street and France Avenue on the suburb's southwest side. About 1,600 students attend in grades 9 through 12. The mascot is a Jaguar.

Jefferson was named a National Blue Ribbon School of Excellence by the US Department of Education in 2009, although the school has had a solid academic reputation within the state for some time.

In 2010, after many years in the Lake Conference, both Bloomington Jefferson and Bloomington Kennedy became founding members of the South Suburban Conference sponsored by the Minnesota State High School League. League activities include athletics, academic teams, drama, and music. The other high school, John F. Kennedy located at 98th Street and Nicollet Avenue, and Jefferson are cross town rivals.

Bloomington Jefferson is a member of the Metro West Conference in the Minnesota State High School League. The school had been a member of the Lake Conference from its opening until it left to become as a founding member of the new South Suburban Conference in 2010. The school then left the South Suburban Conference in 2014 to become as a founding member of the new Metro West Conference.

The 2000-2001 boys hockey team is the subject of the 2003 book Blades of Glory by John Rosengren.

Bloomington Jefferson High School was constructed to support a new curriculum offering. This curriculum used a Modular Scheduling approach to scheduling, based loosely on a lecture attendance and test attendance policy. Students were required to attend a certain number of class lectures a week, as well as test-times.

This approach called for a number of large 'lecture hall' type rooms, which could be subdivided if necessary.

Due to community outcry, the 'mod' approach was cancelled, beginning with the 1979-1980 school year, leaving a school ill-constructed for a more traditional subject-based classroom. In response, many of the large rooms were repartitioned into smaller class-rooms with thin, somewhat flexible walls. These walls did not block noise well, but created a perception of smaller classrooms, and were in use at least until the late 1990s.


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