Why D.C. Everest?
Preparing Our Students
At D.C. Everest, we prepare our students for 21st century career opportunities by helping them develop the academic, career and life skills they need to succeed in a rapidly evolving job market. To develop those skills, we help students discover what their talents are, locate where their interests lie, determine what career paths suit their goals, provide them with hands-on educational and extracurricular opportunities, and help them become adept at applying what they’ve learned to real-world challenges.
A Great Place to Learn
- Discovering and Developing Talent
- Personalized Learning, Personalized Spaces
- STEAM is a Culture, Not a Curriculum
- Real World Experience Matters
- Students Make a Difference
- Focus on the Whole Person
- More than a Single Metric
- Taking Risks and Trying New Things
Discovering and Developing Talent
Personalized Learning, Personalized Spaces
STEAM is a Culture, Not a Curriculum
Real World Experience Matters
Students Make a Difference
Focus on the Whole Person
More than a Single Metric
Taking Risks and Trying New Things
New career paths and jobs are emerging at a momentous pace. As educators, we are preparing our students for jobs that — in many cases — haven’t been invented yet.
District Highlights
- The only district in the region to offer an Advanced Learner/Challenge Magnet Program for intellectually gifted elementary school students
- 96% of DCE Seniors graduated
- 20 languages spoken by students
- 195 students participated in job shadow experiences since 2019-2020
- 294 youth apprenticeships placed since 2019-2020
- An Advanced Placement course for freshmen (and we’re only one of a handful of schools in the state to offer it)
- 16 Career Clusters integrated across an inclusive STEAM culture
- Two National Blue Ribbon Schools (Hatley Elementary and Mountain Bay Elementary)
- Wisconsin gold-level DECA chapter for 30+ years with four gold-level student-based enterprises
- Student voice and leadership opportunities across the district including the "Superintendent's Student Advisory"
- 140 Extracurricular/Co-Curricular clubs
- "Where Everyone Belongs" student leadership group builds a sense of inclusivity, belonging and community at DCE Middle School
- National Honor Society composed of 10 percent of students in grades 10-12
- District selected to participate in "Student Voice and Engagement" League of Innovative Schools Collaborative
- Home to 135,000 square foot Greenheck Turner Community Center with 120 yards X 70 yards indoor artificial turf field, sports simulators, walking track, jump pit, batting cages and meeting rooms