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.

Charles Wright offers more Advanced Placement courses – the equivalent of college courses – than any other high school in the South Puget Sound area.

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.

Patricia Crouch-Cook

Patricia Crouch-Cook

Upper School English, Literary Magazine

Patti Crouch-Cook teaches English in the Upper School.  “I have a great time with my colleagues and really, really enjoy the students we have at Charles Wright,” says Crouch-Cook.  “Occasionally I’ll have an airplane seatmate who, upon learning that I’m a high school English teacher, wants to engage me in a conversation about everything that’s wrong with adolescents today.  I have no time for that.  I can always say with confidence that the students I teach are funny, creative, passionate, and remarkably sophisticated in their thinking.  They never cease to amaze me with the breadth of their knowledge and their partially hidden talents.  Yeah, not everyone’s perfect, but as a group, they’re pretty fabulous.”
 
Patti Crouch-Cook Crouch-Cook particularly enjoys working with seniors on their college essays.  “Since we generally do so much formal, analytical writing, I love their personal essays and the chance to get a glimpse into their own significant life experiences and what insights they’ve been able to draw from them.”

In addition to teaching, Crouch-Cook advises Inkblots, the Upper School literary magazine and is a member of the student/faculty senate.  She enjoys hiking and backpacking and loves the Upper School’s Winterim program.  “It gives teachers a chance to be participants with the students, instead of always being in charge,” she says.  “Whether hiking to the bottom of Havasu Canyon in Arizona or challenging an advanced ceramics student to see how many bowls we can throw in one day, I’ve always felt during Winterim week more like a partner in a cool adventure than a teacher.”
 
Crouch-Cook graduated from the University of Wyoming and holds a masters degree in education from Western Washington University.  She joined Charles Wright in 1998.  She always enjoys cross-country skiing, running, medalsmithing and chasing small children (her own).  

Visit her site