Los Angeles Unified School District
Encyclopedia : L : LO : LOS : Los Angeles Unified School District
| Year | Student Enrollment |
|---|---|
| 1993-1994 | 639,129 |
| 1994-1995 | 632,973 |
| 1995-1996 | 647,612 |
| 1996-1997 | 667,305 |
| 1997-1998 | 680,430 |
| 1998-1999 | 695,885 |
| 1999-2000 | 710,007 |
| 2000-2001 | 721,346 |
| 2001-2002 | 735,058 |
| 2002-2003 | 746,852 |
| 2003-2004 | 747,009 |
| 2004-2005 | 741,283 |
The Los Angeles Unified School District ( the "LAUSD") is the largest (in terms of number of students) public school system in California and the second-largest in the United States. Only the New York City Department of Education has a larger student population. As of 2005, LAUSD serves over 710,000 students.
The school district serves Los Angeles and all or portions of several adjoining California cities. The LAUSD is so large that it has its own police department. The Los Angeles School Police Department was established in 1948 to provide police services for LAUSD schools.
The LAUSD has a local reputation for extremely overcrowded schools and poor maintenance. A significant number of the schools do not exhibit such conditions and the LAUSD has renovated some schools in recent years.
A recent attempt at reform led to the creation of 11 minidistricts with decentralized management. Due to the cost of this additional bureaucracy, Superintendent Roy Romer called for merging the minidistricts to cut overhead. United Teachers Los Angeles, the union representing teachers, supported the plan to cut the number of minidistricts. In 2004, the number of minidistricts was reduced to eight. After his election to mayor, Antonio Villaraigosa advocated bringing control of the public schools under the mayor's office, a move that resulted in considerable protest from teachers, LAUSD board members, and residents of communities served by LAUSD but not in the City of Los Angeles. The mayor has had to backtrack from this plan.
Every LAUSD household or residential area is zoned to an elementary school, a middle school, and a high school.
Governance
The current superintendent is former Colorado governor and Democratic Party chairman Roy Romer.The current members of the Board of Education are Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte (District 1), José Huizar (District 2), Jon Lauritzen (District 3), Marlene Canter (District 4), David Tokofsky (District 5), Julie Korenstein (District 6), Mike Lansing (District 7)
LAUSD cities and unincorporated areas
Source: [Los Angeles Times]All of the following communities:
- Baldwin Hills
- Bell
- Carson
- Cudahy
- Florence
- Gardena
- Huntington Park
- Los Angeles - Including, but not limited to:
- * List of districts and neighborhoods of Los Angeles
- Lomita
- Marina del Rey
- Maywood
- San Fernando
- South Gate
- Topanga
- Universal City
- Vernon
- View Park
- Walnut Park
- West Athens
- Westmont
- West Hollywood
- Beverly Hills (only a portion of the city is served by LAUSD)
- Commerce (only a portion of the city is served by LAUSD)
- East Los Angeles (other parts of East Los Angeles are served by Montebello Unified School District)
- Hawthorne (only a portion of the city is served by LAUSD)
- Inglewood (only a portion of the city is served by LAUSD)
- Monterey Park (only a portion of the city is served by LAUSD)
- Rancho Palos Verdes
- West Compton
- Willowbrook
List of schools and properties
Secondary schools
4-12 schools
6-12 schools
- Los Angeles Center for Enriched Studies
- Eagle Rock Jr. / Sr. High School
- Fulton College Preparatory School
Continuation High Schools
- Addams High School
- Angel's Gate High School
- Avalon High School
- Boyle Heights High School
- Central High School
- Cheviot Hills High School
- Del Rey High School
- Douglas High School
- East Valley Continuation High School
- Eagle Tree Continuation High School
- Earhart High School
- Einstein High School
- Ellington High School
- Evergreen High School
- Grey High School
- Highland Park High School
- Hope High School
- Independence High School
- Indian Springs High School
- Leonis High School
- Lewis High School
- London High School
- Metropolitan High School
- Mission High School
- Moneta High School
- Monterey High School
- Mt. Lukens High School
- Newmark High School
- Odyssey High School
- Owensmouth High School
- Patton High School
- Phoenix High School
- Pueblo de Los Angeles High School
- Rodia High School
- Rogers High School
- San Antonio High School
- Stoney Point High School
- Temescal Canyon High School
- Thoreau High School
- Truth High School
- View Park Continuation High School
- Whitman High School
- Wooden High School
- Young High School
High schools
- Accelerated High School
- Animo South Los Angeles
- Animo Venice Charter High School
- Banning High School
- Bell High School
- Belmont High School
- Birmingham High School
- California Academy for LS #2
- Camino Nuevo High School
- Canoga Park High School
- Carson High School
- Central City Value
- Chatsworth High School
- Cleveland High School
- College Ready Academy High School
- Crenshaw Arts Technical
- Crenshaw High School
- David Starr Jordan High School
- De La Hoya Animo High School
- Discovery Charter Preparatory
- Dorsey High School
- El Camino Real High School
- Fairfax High School (West Hollywood)
- Francisco Bravo Medical High School
- Franklin High School
- Fremont High School
- Gardena High School
- Garfield High School
- Granada Hills High School
- Grant, Ulysses S. High School
- Hollywood High School
- Hamilton, Alexander High School
- High Tech High School
- Huntington Park Senior High School
- Jefferson, Thomas High School
- John C. Fremont Senior High School
- John Marshall High School
- Kennedy, John F. Senior High School
- Leap High School
- Lincoln, Abraham Senior High School
- Locke, Alain Leroy Senior High School
- Locke Senior High School
- Los Angeles High School
- Manual Arts Senior High School
- Middle College High School
- Monroe High School
- Narbonne Senior High School
- North Hollywood High School
- Northridge Academy High School
- Palisades Charter High School
- John H. Francis Polytechnic Senior High School
- Renaissance Academic Senior High School
- Reseda Senior High School
- Roosevelt High School
- San Fernando High School
- San Pedro Senior High School
- South Gate Senior High School
- Sylmar Senior High School
- Taft, William Howard High School
- University High School
- Van Nuys High School
- Venice High School
- Verdugo Hills Senior High School
- View Park Preparatory Accelerated High School
- Washington Preparatory Senior High School
- Westchester Senior High School
- Wilson Senior High School
Middle schools
- Alfred Nobel Middle School
- Alexander Fleming Middle School
- Bancroft Middle School
- Berendo Middle School
- Chester W. Nimitz Middle School
- Christopher Columbus Middle School
- David Wark Griffith Middle School
- Dr. George Washington Carver Middle Schoolchildren elsewhere)
- Emerson Middle School
- Gaspar De Portola Middle School
- George Ellery Hale Middle School, Woodland Hills
- James Madison Middle School, North Hollywood
- John Adams Middle School
- John Burroughs Middle School, Los Angeles
- John Sutter Middle School
- King Middle School
- Le Conte Middle School
- Millikan Middle School
- Mount Vernon Middle School
- Mount Gleason Middle School
- Oliver Wendell Holmes International Middle School
- Orville Wright Middle School
- Pacoima Middle School
- Palms Middle School
- Parkman Middle School
- Patrick Henry Middle School (Granada Hills)
- Paul Revere Charter Middle School (Brentwood/Los Angeles)
- Portola Middle School (Los Angeles)
- Robert E. Peary Middle School
- Robert Fulton Middle School
- San Fernando Middle School
- Sepulveda Middle School
- Southeast Middle School, South Gate
- [South Gate Middle School]www.southgatems.org
- Thomas Starr King Middle School
- Van Nuys Middle school
- Virgil Middle School
- Walter Reed Middle School
- Webster Middle School
Elementary schools
- Academia Semillas del Pueblo (K-8)
- Cahuenga Elemenatry School
- Castle Heights Avenue Elementary School
- Chapman Elementary School
- Commonwealth Elementary School
- Corona Avenue Elementary School
- Coeur d'Alene Avenue Elementary School
- Cowan Avenue Elementary School
- Delevan Drive Elementary [link]
- Echo Horizon School
- Euclid Avenue Elementary School
- Fairburn Elementary School
- Ford Boulevard Elementary School
- Glen Alta Elementary School
- Grant Elementary School
- Harbor City Elementary School
- Hobart Elementary School
- Kester Elementary School
- Liggett Street Elementary School
- Lockwood Elementary School
- Normont Elementary School
- Overland Avenue Elementary School
- Ramona Elementary School
- Roscomare Road Elementary School
- Sherman Oaks Elementary School
- Shirley Avenue Elementary School
- Wadsworth Avenue Elementary School
- Warner Avenue Elementary School
- Westport Heights Elementary School
- Westwood Charter School
- Westminster Avenue Elementary School
- Woodland Hills Elementary School
Properties
The LAUSD is almost certainly the largest property owner in Los Angeles. Three recent development projects have generated controversy.Belmont Learning Center
The Belmont Learning Center, in the densely populated Westlake district just west of downtown, was originally envisioned as a mixed-use education and retail complex to include several schools, shops and a public park. After more than a decade of delays stemming from the environmental review process, ground was broken for construction in 1995. Midway through construction it was discovered that explosive methane and toxic hydrogen sulfide were seeping from an old underground oil field. Later, an active surface fault was found under one of the completed buildings, necessitating its removal. The LAUSD had spent an estimated $175 million dollars on the project by 2004, with an additional $110 million budgeted for cleanup efforts. The total cost is estimated by LAUSD at $300 million. Critics have speculated that it may end up costing closer to $500 million.The Ambassador Hotel
Another controversial project has been the development of The Ambassador Hotel property on Wilshire Boulevard near densely populated Koreatown. The LAUSD fought over the defunct landmark with among others Donald Trump, who later walked away from it, with the legal battle dating back to 1989. In 2001, the LAUSD finally obtained legal ownership of the property. Plans to demolish the building, site where Senator Robert F. Kennedy was shot, met with strong opposition from preservationists. (Kennedy's family, however, supported the demolition plans.) In August 2005, LAUSD settled a lawsuit over the matter that had been filed by several preservationist groups: most of the Ambassador complex would be destroyed, but the Paul Williams-designed coffee shop and the Cocoanut Grove nightclub would be preserved, with the Grove serving as the auditorium for a new school to be built on the site. Demolition began in late 2005, and the last section of the hotel fell on January 16, 2006. The first new school on the site is scheduled to open in 2009.Santee Dairy
In 2005, soil samples taken at the LAUSD-owned site of a former Santee Dairy facility in South Los Angeles found high levels of carcinogens in soil used as foundation fill for a high school then under construction. A small controversy brewed on the matter, with some neighborhood activists and LAUSD critics claiming a repeat of the Belmont Learning Center fiasco. State scientists determined that the contaminated soil was sufficiently deep to pose no threat to students on the site, and the school opened its doors in September 2005.
Notable staff members
Teachers
- Jaime Escalante taught students Calculus at Garfield High School in the East Los Angeles CDP of Los Angeles County for many years, as dramatized in the movie Stand and Deliver.
- Essie Mae Washington-Williams, the daughter of Strom Thurmond, taught typing in the district from 1967 until 1997.
Other
- Fabian Núñez, a politician who served as the government affairs director for LAUSD
See also
External links
- [Los Angeles Unified School District Web site]
- [Los Angeles School Police Department Web site]
- [Enrollment Statistics]
- [United Teachers Los Angeles website]
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