Arcadia High School (California)

Last updated

Arcadia High School
Arcadia High School logo.jpg
Address
Arcadia High School (California)
180 Campus Drive

,
91006

United States
Coordinates 34°07′50″N118°02′13″W / 34.130563°N 118.036852°W / 34.130563; -118.036852
Information
TypePublic
MottoA Symbol of Honor and Pride
Established1952
School district Arcadia Unified School District
PrincipalAngie Dillman
Faculty130.45 (FTE) [1]
Grades9–12
Number of students3,161 (2018-19) [1]
Student to teacher ratio24.23 [1]
Color(s)Cardinal and gold
Athletics CIF Southern Section
Athletics conference Pacific League
Nickname Apaches
Website ahs.ausd.net

Arcadia High School is a four-year comprehensive secondary school located in Arcadia, California, United States. It is part of the Arcadia Unified School District.

Contents

The high school was opened in 1952. The incoming freshman classes consist of students that feed in from Arcadia's three middle schools: First Avenue Middle School, Richard Henry Dana Middle School, and Foothills Middle School.

The school has a teaching staff of 148. Four hold doctorate degrees, and 110 have master's degrees. [2] The administrative staff consists of the principal, four assistant principals, and one dean of students. Arcadia High School is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.

Arcadia High School has a GreatSchools rating of 9 out of 10. [3]

History

The Arcadia School District came to be at the same time as the incorporation of Arcadia in 1903. [4] [5]

About 1975, the closed-campus policy and the dress code were discontinued. The change was influenced by the U.S. Supreme Court decision Tinker v. Des Moines , which stated that students do not "shed their constitutional rights... at the school house door." That year the student population of Arcadia High reached its highest population at about 3,300 students. [4]

In the 1980s, enrollment decreased considerably to about 2,200 students, largely due to the aging demographic in Arcadia. Since then, enrollment has rapidly increased. In the 1990s, the demographics of the school dramatically changed. [4]

A $218 million bond measure was passed on the November 7, 2006, election ballot for the purpose of upgrading and repairing Arcadia schools. A large part of local property taxes are absorbed by the state, and Arcadia is the lowest-funded unified school district in Los Angeles County. [6] A new Student Services Center provides a grand entrance to the high school on Campus Drive. The two-story structure includes general and special education classrooms, three computer labs, a television studio, graphic design and digital photography classrooms, and the high school's career center and health, counseling, and administrative offices. The brick and glass exterior finish visibly blends with other elements of the campus. Ground was broken in the summer of 2008. [6]

The Science Building is located on the south side of the campus on Duarte Road. The two-story center includes chemistry labs with preparation areas and collegiate-style biology and physics classrooms separated by lecture rooms. [6]

The 40,000-square-foot (3,700 m2) Arcadia High School Performing Arts Center is located at the northwest corner of the campus. The center has ground-level and mezzanine seating for 1,200, and a stage that accommodates 150 musicians. The building contains a smaller theater, orchestra and dance rooms, and an internal courtyard. The Performing Arts Center construction began in 2010 [6] and opened in October 2012. [7]

Controversies

Native American symbols in branding

Before 1997, Arcadia High School had used several Native American symbols in its branding, including an "Apache Joe" mascot, the Pow Wow school newspaper, the "Apache News" television program, the "Smoke Signals" news bulletin boards, the school's auxiliary team's marching "Apache Princesses" and opposing football team fans' "Scalp the Apaches". [8]

In September 1997, the L.A. School Board banned the use of offensive Native American branding from its schools following criticism from several Native American groups. [9] Members of the groups then advocated the same for Arcadia. The school consulted with Native American groups and made some concessions, including the removal of the "Apache Joe" mascot, the "Apache Princesses", and some other portrayals of Native Americans. [8] The student newspaper Pow Wow was renamed to Arcadia Quill in 2021. [10] [11] The news show Apache News retained its name. [12]

Arcadia High School has established a relationship with the White Mountain Apaches through the Student Council Apache Commission (SCAC). The commission holds fundraisers and drives for the White Mountain Apache Tribe in Cibecue, Arizona, and monitors the school's use of Native American motifs. [13] [ better source needed ]

In July 2020, following several petitions to change the school's nickname, AUSD Superintendent David Vannasdall announced that the administration will consider possible options after schools resume in-class sessions due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [14]

Athletics

The gym at Arcadia High School. Arcadia High School (8311862662).jpg
The gym at Arcadia High School.
The track at Arcadia High School. Arcadia High School (8311862380).jpg
The track at Arcadia High School.

Arcadia High School is governed by the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) Southern Section as a member of the Pacific League. Its colors are cardinal and gold. The boys compete in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, volleyball, water polo, and badminton. The girls compete in basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track and field, volleyball, badminton, and water polo. There is a pep squad that is made up of three individual groups: Song, Cheer, and Pep flags. Arcadia's main rival is Crescenta Valley High School. Both teams often contend for the League Championship.

Arcadia teams often qualify for the CIF playoffs. In 2005, boys' soccer was a finalist in the Division III CIF playoffs.The girls track team has lost only two dual meets in the last four years and regularly sends athletes to CIF Finals. More recently, the girls soccer team has won 7 consecutive league titles and had back-to-back trips to the CIF Quarter Finals for girls soccer.

Cross country, and track and field

The boys' cross country team were placed 3rd, 7th, 8th, 4th, 3rd, 1st, 2nd and 1st in the 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, and 2012 California Interscholastic Federation CIF-State Cross Country Championships in Division I, respectively. They were led by renowned head coach Jim O'Brien. [15] [16]

In 2005 they qualified for the state championship for the first time in school history. They placed third overall and earned a spot on the state podium. In 2006, Arcadia went to the Nike Team Nationals Championship open race where Andrew Pilavjian led the way for the Apaches as the ninth fastest American runner on the day he placed seventh in the open race and fourteenth overall (open and invitational races combined, including Kenyan national runners).

In 2008, the team placed fourth in Division I at the state championships and came in second in the Open (non-invitational) race behind Kenya at Nike Team Nationals. Renaud Poizat led the team at the state championship with a fifth-place showing. They then placed third at the state championship in 2009, losing by a narrow margin of just 12 points. In 2010, the team took first place at Nike Team Nationals and set a new record for the lowest team time in history. The team remained undefeated the entire season and broke the California state record. Arcadia senior cross country star Ammar Mousa was named the Gatorade boys' cross country runner of the year in California for a second straight year in 2011. As defending state champions in 2011, Arcadia came up short of back-to-back state championships where they placed 2nd, however, did end up placing fourth at the national championships. They were led by individual state champion Sergio Gonzalez.

In 2012, the boys cross country team won another state championship, led by Estevan De La Rosa. They went on to win the Nike Cross National Championships. [17]

The Boys Track team has also been successful from 2005, winning over 90% of its meets and three league championships in a row, (2005–07). In 2009, Arcadia track became the first team in the Pacific League to be undefeated on every level. The boys and girls frosh and boys and girls varsity were unbeaten. 44–0. 2009 was the 4th league championship for Arcadia varsity boys track in five years. The girls varsity has repeated as league champion for a third straight year (07-09). Coach Doug Speck was inducted into the Cross Country Coaches Association Hall of Fame at Mt. San Antonio College in 2009. [18]

Arcadia is known for its annual Arcadia Invitational, the largest high school track meet in the nation. [19] The meet has witnessed high school records being broken and has featured future Olympians Quincy Watts, Steve Lewis, Danny Everett, Valerie Brisco-Hooks, Gail Devers, Mike Powell, Michael Marsh, Marion Jones, Allyson Felix, Monique Henderson, Deena Kastor, Michelle Perry, Alan Webb, Cathy Freeman from Australia, Bryshon Nellum and other athletic stars such as USC and Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Robert Woods, USC wide receiver Marqise Lee, George Farmer, De'Anthony Thomas, George Atkins III, and Remontay McClain. [20]

Academic teams

Arcadia is home to several academic teams, including the Constitution Team, Quiz Bowl, Destination Imagination, Mathematics Team, Physics Team, Science Olympiad, National Science Bowl, National Ocean Sciences Bowl, Mock Trial Team, Speech and Debate Team, Solar Cup, Academic Decathlon, and National History Bowl.[ citation needed ]

Recent achievements:

Performing arts

Arcadia has a drama program, a dance/prop production program (Colorguard) that has placed third in the nation twice, a dance program, an advanced dance company (Orchesis), four choirs, and a large instrumental music program. The Arcadia High School Theatre Department won first place in the High School Intermediate Category for its ensemble performance of Oklahoma!. Competing with schools from all over the United States, they secured the first-place trophy in February 2012. [27] [ better source needed ] In 2013, the Arcadia High School Theatre Department took home the Drama Teachers Association of Southern California (DTASC) Sweepstakes Trophy. Out of 66 schools throughout Southern California, Arcadia High School won the most first-place awards ranking them in first place for the overall sweepstakes award. [28] [ better source needed ] The Marching Band and Color Guard was selected to perform in the nationally televised 2019 Disney Parks Magical Christmas Day Parade [29] and the 2022 Rose Parade in nearby Pasadena, California on New Year's Day.

Notable alumni

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References

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