Shonto Weather Station Through NAU
Shonto Preparatory School K-8 school has received a weather station!
Dr. Diana Anderson of NAU was generous enough to set up a weather station here in Shonto. It is located on the roof above Wing C. It located at the far west so it can display accurate data, especially the wind speeds! We all know that we get a lot of wind during the Spring months! The weather station can also tell us the outside temperature, the temperature in my classroom, the barometric pressure, humidity, heat index, wind speed and direction and if any precipitation has fallen. The weather station can run efficiently with the help of Diana Anderson, Mrs. Secody and the IT department. There will be problems sometimes but we will get it up and going as soon as we can if that should happen.
Mission Statement
It is our mission to become and remain the finest school district in the state of Arizona and on the Navajo Nation by insuring that each student becomes all that he or she is capable of being while respecting cultural and traditional values.
Background & History
The Shonto Preparatory School (SPS) is a K-12 school district serving a Navajo Indian student population in a remote community located on a high plateau, 6,500 feet above sea level, in Navajo County of northeast Arizona . The Shonto Preparatory School district is comprised of a K-8 Bureau of Indian Education funded Grant School and a 9-12 State of Arizona Charter School. Shonto Preparatory School has a long history of community support and ownership. The community education started back in the 1930's. The Hogan BIA facilities were constructed in 1933-34 in the Shonto Canyon . Our elders wanted to have community children attend school nearby in Shonto rather than somewhere distant from home. In 1966-67, the school moved up to its present location. In 1996, the former Shonto Boarding School became a Grant/Charter School, known as Shonto Preparatory School . A Charter High School was started in 1997 with a 9 th grade class. Each year, thereafter another class was added. The school currently serves students from the isolated, rural communities of Shonto, Inscription House, Black Mesa, Tonalea, Kaibeto, Pinon, Kayenta and Navajo Mountain . Children are bussed from as far as forty miles one-way to attend school. Currently, the Shonto Preparatory School has a total enrollment number of 618 students; of that number, 99.6% are Native American. Over 90% of our total student population is eligible for the free or reduced lunch programs.