DID YOU KNOW?
Over a five-year period, students’ SAT scores averaged 1,260 points compared to the national average of 1,000 points.
Typically, 20 percent of a Charles Wright graduating class are National Merit Scholars or Commended Students.
No South Sound school, public or private, offers more Advanced Placement courses than we do.
Minority students account for 28 percent of the student body.
In the last decade, Charles Wright students consistently earned top honors among the State of Washington’s journalism students.
Charles Wright grants over $1.3 million in financial assistance to 21% of the student body.

Jeremy Stubbs
Upper School Math
Jeremy Stubbs teaches algebra and advanced algebra in the Upper School. “The most important thing in my classroom is the students,” says Stubbs. “Without them, there would be no reason to come to work.”
“I can teach students better when I know who my students are,” says Stubbs. “The greatest moments for me at CWA have not happened in the classroom. They have happened at the Point Defiance Zoo on Tussock-Moth Day (an all-school community service day), hiking on the trail near Lake Ozette, or sitting and talking in the atrium of the Upper School during a shared free period. When the students see that you care about them, not just as students in your class but really care what happens to them in all aspects of their life, they will put the effort back into the classroom. And then the real learning can take place.”
Stubbs graduated from Oklahoma State University. He joined the Charles Wright faculty in 2005. He coaches volleyball and serves in the student-faculty senate. He enjoys hiking, backpacking, and playing video games and golf.
Visit his web page
“I can teach students better when I know who my students are,” says Stubbs. “The greatest moments for me at CWA have not happened in the classroom. They have happened at the Point Defiance Zoo on Tussock-Moth Day (an all-school community service day), hiking on the trail near Lake Ozette, or sitting and talking in the atrium of the Upper School during a shared free period. When the students see that you care about them, not just as students in your class but really care what happens to them in all aspects of their life, they will put the effort back into the classroom. And then the real learning can take place.” Stubbs graduated from Oklahoma State University. He joined the Charles Wright faculty in 2005. He coaches volleyball and serves in the student-faculty senate. He enjoys hiking, backpacking, and playing video games and golf.
Visit his web page