Paulding Middle School

Last updated
Paulding Middle School [1]
Address
Paulding Middle School
600 Crown Hill Street

, ,
93420-2869 [2]

United States
Coordinates 35°02′59″N120°29′13″W / 35.0497°N 120.4869°W / 35.0497; -120.4869
Information
School typeRegular [2] Public Secondary
Established1967 (1967)
FounderRuth Paulding
StatusCurrently operational [2]
School boardLucia Mar Unified School District board of education
School district Lucia Mar Unified School District
NCES District ID 0623080 [3]
NCES School ID 062308003528 [2]
PrincipalEdward Arrigoni [4]
Teaching staff26.00 (on FTE basis)
Grades7–8 [2]
GenderCo-ed
Enrollment642 (see below) (2009–2010)
Student to teacher ratio24.69 [2]
CampusSemi-Rural
Color(s)  Green
  Gold
MascotPatriot
NewspaperNews on The Daily Bulletin (local Public-access television cable TV through Paulding only)
Website lmusd.org/education/components/scrapbook/default.php?sectiondetailid=9511&sc_id=1194675015

Paulding Middle School (formerly the Arroyo Grande Union High School) was originally the first high school built in the area in 1906. Decades later, the school became the lower school that fed into the new high school. Currently, the school is one of three middle schools in the Lucia Mar Unified School District teaching about 550 students in grades 7 and 8. Paulding has been designated a California Distinguished School four times [1] [5]

Contents

History

High school

Arroyo Grande high school students originally met for classes in the original grammar school building in town. The grammar school moved to a different location, and the high school students moved with it. Later, the students met in the Good Samaritan Hall on Branch Street while the first dedicated high school building was built. In 1907 the students were able to move into the new wooden building at the top of Crown Hill. [6]

This was the first high school built in the area between San Luis Obispo and Santa Maria. Ten years later, the wooden building was replaced by a larger brick building. Over the next two decades, a shop building, a tennis court, and hot air heating were added. In 1939, the Works Progress Administration built the gymnasium that is still in use today. [6]

Middle school

Several years later, the student body again outgrew the capacity of the school. A much larger high school was built to the southwest of the original campus, and it assumed the name of Arroyo Grande High School. The original school became the Ruth Paulding Junior High School that fed the new high school. In the early 1990s, the school was renamed to Ruth Paulding Middle School, though it continues to teach only grades 7 and 8.

As the function of the school changed, the school went through several name changes. These include Arroyo Grande High School, Arroyo Grande Union High School, Arroyo Grande Lower School, Crown Hill, Ruth Paulding Junior High School, and currently Ruth Paulding Middle School. Students and other locals usually refer to the school as "Paulding Middle School" or simply "Paulding".

Curriculum

The curriculum requires four quarters of Advisory, Language Arts, Mathematics, Social Studies, Physical Education, Science, and grade-specific electives. [7]

Seventh grade electives include the Wheel (a rotation of health, college and career awareness, exploring technology, and fine arts courses), math and language support, and AVID: A class for students who aspire to go to college, although their parent(s) did not, band, drama (limited entry), and guitar. [7]

Eighth graders may choose from electives including Leadership/Government, Band (advanced or intermediate), Drama/Speech, Art, Math and Language support, AVID, [8] Spanish, Guitar, and Yearbook/Graphic Production. [7]

Advisory is the first period of each school day. It is taught by all teachers at Paulding, including P.E. and elective teachers, and the class prepares the students for the school day.

Campus

Like the other two middle schools in the district, Paulding is built on a hill overlooking the surrounding city. The highest point on the campus is the peak of Crown Hill in the westernmost corner of the campus at about 206 feet. The lowest point is 125 feet, 81 feet lower, at the southeast corner of the athletic fields. [9]

Layout

The Paulding campus is laid out in a semicircle. At one end are the Gym and P.E. area (numbered in the 10s) and the library media center and office area (the 20s). The rest of the campus is arranged like a wagon wheel with radiating spokes. Each of the spokes consists of a wing of the school, with the wings numbered by multiples of 10 from 30 to 70. An outer ring encloses the other spokes and is numbered in the 80s. [10]

Four of the wings are often referred to as "teams". The 30s and 40s are eighth grade teams, and the 50s and 60s are seventh grade teams. [11] Competition occurs between the grade-level wings.

History of significant events

1906
The original wooden high school building was built atop Crown Hill to the east of the downtown village of Arroyo Grande. It was the first high school to be built between San Luis Obispo and Santa Maria. [6]
1916
A larger brick building was constructed at the same site, replacing the earlier building. [6]
1917–1938
A shop building, tennis court, and improved heating were added to the school. [6]
1939
The campus gymnasium was built, which is still in use today. [6]
2001
In August 2001, the district approved construction of a $1.9 million, 10,500-square-foot, multi-use building between the office and 30s wing. Ground was broken in 2003, and by 2005, the project was complete. [9] [12] Also in 2001, a new track and court complex were added to the athletic fields. [9]
2009
At the beginning of the 2009 school year, a sidewalk was added to one side of Crown Hill enabling students to walk up and down it.
2011
Following a bat infestation inside the school's roofs in the mid-1990s[ citation needed ] and an ongoing rodent problem in the ceilings,[ citation needed ] Paulding received new roofs during the summer of 2011 paid for out of district maintenance funds. [13]
2018
The "5-Star Students" program is adopted, allowing students to use points from their ID after it has been reached a certain quantity of scans from a staff member to earn small prizes. [14]

Extracurricular activities

Athletics

The athletic fields for the school are located 30-feet below the locker rooms across the busy East Branch Street. [9] Students use a chain-link fenced pedestrian bridge and a steep stairway to reach the fields below. During the 2001–02 academic year, a track and more courts were added to the athletic fields. [9] Before that, field sports were played on grassy lawns outlined with chalk.

Paulding Middle School sponsors boys and girls basketball, cross country, track and field, and boys and girls volleyball. [15] Additionally, the soccer club plays throughout the fall with both boys and girls teams. The faculty adviser, Mr. Calderon, volunteers his time, and the club receives quite a bit of community support. [16]

The non-profit 5 Cities Roller Kitties roller derby league holds practices and events on the Paulding basketball court. [17]

Destination ImagiNation

The school participates in the annual Destination ImagiNation program. The February 2002 team (joint with Judkins Middle School) of Daniel Angel, Bryce Blue ( Wassup Rockers ), Zac Efron ( High School Musical ), Anthony Martin, Chris Reinacher, and Brogan Sterns won the Global Finals in the challenge "The Art of Improv, Middle Level". [18] [19]

In February 2011, the "Extreme Makeover, Disaster Edition" (a joint team with Arroyo Grande High School) and "The Cavorting Beasties of Cyclical Proportions" (joint with Nipomo High School) earned perfect scores in the regional competition. They, along with "Your Average Lunatics" (a third team that scored well and was exclusively from Paulding), advanced to the state finals. [20] At state, the teams placed 6th out of 6, 2nd out of 2, and 7th out of 14 respectively in their grade levels. [21] The 2012 competition will be held on February 27 at AGHS. [22]

Homework clubs

Homework Clubs are voluntary (though some students are "strongly encouraged" to attend) opportunities to work on homework or a reading assignment. All of the homework clubs are open to any student who complies with the rules and would like extra help with their coursework. There are three homework clubs that meet regularly, though other teachers open their classrooms for similar help on a regular basis. Attendance records are kept of all participants. [16]

School band

The school band performs at numerous parades and events including:

Band members sell a "Green and Gold Card" with community discount offers as a fundraiser. The money raised benefits the Paulding Music Department. [24]

Other clubs

Students may participate in several other clubs, including, GATE, Homework Club, Mock Trial, Paulding Sports Association, and Robotics. There also is an ASB[ clarification needed ] formed from a representative from each advisory or homeroom. [16]

Notable alumni

Awards, recognition, and rankings

Statistics

Enrollment

The table below details enrollment figures for the past three years and decades.

Total enrollment:2010–11 [29] 2009–10 [2] [29] 2008–09 [29] [30] 2007–08 [29] 2000 [29] 1990 [29]
StudentsPercentChange
(1 yr)
Change
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentStudentsPercentChange
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercent
629100.00Decrease2.svg -13
Decrease2.svg 24
642100.00Increase2.svg 19
623100.00n/an/an/a653100.00Increase2.svg 38
615100.00
Enrollment by grade:2010–11 [29] 2009–10 [2] [29] 2008–09 [29] 2007–08 [29] 2000 [29] 1990 [29]
StudentsPercentChange
(1 yr)
Change
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentStudentsPercentChange
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercent
7th graden/an/an/an/a32250.16Increase2.svg 12
31049.76n/an/an/a32549.77Increase2.svg 17
30851.25
8th graden/an/an/an/a32049.84Increase2.svg 7
31350.24n/an/an/a32850.23Increase2.svg 35
29348.75
Enrollment by gender:2010–11 [29] 2009–10 [2] [29] 2008–09 [29] 2007–08 [29] 2000 [29] 1990 [29]
StudentsPercentChange
(1 yr)
Change
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentStudentsPercentChange
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercent
Malen/an/an/an/a34253.27Increase2.svg 18
32452.01n/an/an/a33451.15n/an/rn/r
Femalen/an/an/an/a30046.73Increase2.svg 1
29947.99n/an/an/a31948.85n/an/rn/r
Enrollment by race:2010–11 [29] 2009–10 [2] [29] 2008–09 [29] 2007–08 [29] 2000 [29] 1990 [29]
StudentsPercentChange
(1 yr)
Change
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentStudentsPercentChange
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercent
Whiten/an/an/an/a41364.33Decrease2.svg -1
41466.45n/an/an/a50377.03Increase2.svg 52
45173.33
Hispanicn/an/an/an/a17827.73Increase2.svg 42
13621.83n/an/an/a11717.92Decrease2.svg -32
14924.23
Asian or Pacific Islandern/an/an/an/a274.21Increase2.svg 4
233.69n/an/an/a232.30Increase2.svg 15
81.30
Two or more racesn/an/an/an/a162.49Decrease2.svg -27
436.90n/an/an/an/rn/rn/an/rn/r
Blackn/an/an/an/a40.62Decrease2.svg -27
60.96n/an/an/a40.61Decrease2.svg -2
60.98
American Indian/Alaska Nativen/an/an/an/a30.47Increase2.svg 2
10.16n/an/an/a60.92Increase2.svg 5
10.16
Hawaiian/Pacific Islandern/an/an/an/a10.16Increase2.svg 1
0'0n/an/an/an/rn/rn/an/rn/r
Qualify for Free/Reduced Lunches:2010–11 [29] 2009–10 [2] [29] 2008–09 [29] 2007–08 [29] 2000 [29] 1990 [29]
StudentsPercentChange
(1 yr)
Change
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentChangeStudentsPercentStudentsPercentChange
(10 yrs)
StudentsPercent
Free lunchesn/an/an/an/a16025.44Increase Negative.svg 44
11618.62n/an/an/a11317.30n/an/rn/r
Reduced-price lunchesn/an/an/an/a7712.24Increase Negative.svg 30
477.54n/an/an/a578.73n/an/rn/r

Faculty and staff

Academic YearPupils to TeachersTeachersOther Staff
Ratio [29] Change FTE [29] Change# [31] Change
2010–1124.2 [31] Decrease Positive.svg -0.5
26.0 [31] 0
10n/a
2009–1024.7Increase Negative.svg 4.2
26.0Decrease2.svg -0.8
n/an/a
2008–0920.5n/a26.8n/an/an/a
2007–08n/an/an/an/an/an/a
200022.8Increase Negative.svg 1.6
28.6Decrease2.svg -0.4
n/an/a
199021.2n/a29.0n/an/an/a

Notes:

See also

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References

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