place

Wilmer-Hutchins High School

1928 establishments in TexasDallas Independent School District high schoolsEducational institutions established in 1928Public high schools in Dallas

Wilmer-Hutchins High School (nicknamed "The Hutch") is a public secondary school in Dallas, Texas (USA). A part of the Dallas Independent School District, Wilmer-Hutchins High was formerly part of the now defunct Wilmer-Hutchins Independent School District. Located at 5520 Langdon Road in far south Dallas, the 9-12 campus serves portions of Dallas, most of Hutchins, Wilmer, a small portion of Lancaster, as well as unincorporated areas in southeastern Dallas County.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Wilmer-Hutchins High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Wilmer-Hutchins High School
Langdon Road, Dallas

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Wilmer-Hutchins High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 32.656216 ° E -96.729933 °
placeShow on map

Address

Langdon Road 5520
75141 Dallas
Texas, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Dallas College Cedar Valley
Dallas College Cedar Valley

Dallas College Cedar Valley Campus (Cedar Valley or CVC) is a public community college in Lancaster, Texas. It opened in 1977 and has an enrollment of more than 6,000 students. It is part of Dallas College. Beginning in the spring of 2004, Cedar Valley College began operating the Cedar Valley College Center at Cedar Hill. The extension center, located in Cedar Hill, Texas, will assist the district's continuing education program featuring classes on computer software, dance, English as a second language, health and wellness, writing résumés and CPA accreditation. For the 2008-09 school year, Cedar Valley began a joint dual credit enrollment project with the Dallas Independent School District and the Cedar Hill Independent School District by opening two early college high school campuses, one in Dallas and one in Cedar Hill. The new Dallas school is named Early College High School and provides the opportunity for its graduates to accomplish a high-school diploma and 60 hours of college credit concurrently. Like most early college high school programs, the school was designed to attract students who do not typically enroll in traditional dual-credit programs, such students whose parents did not attend college and those that might feel a college education is not financially possible. The new Cedar Hill school is named Cedar Hill Collegiate High School, and attracts students who are seeking 60 college credit hours upon graduating high school. The school is open to students of all backgrounds; however, the staff worked particularly hard to recruit black and Latino males, who are the least likely to earn college degrees.