San Francisco University High School

Coordinates: 37°47′27.58″N 122°26′43.72″W / 37.7909944°N 122.4454778°W / 37.7909944; -122.4454778

San Francisco University High School
Location
San Francisco, California
USA
Information
Type Private, Coeducational
Established 1973, Opened 1975
Head of School Julia Russell Eells
Faculty 66
Enrollment 389
Average class size 16 students
Student to teacher ratio 8:1
Campus Urban, three city blocks
Color(s) Red, White
Athletics 22 sports
Mascot Red Devils
Average SAT scores (2011) Critical Reading 710
Math 700
Writing 730
Newspaper Devil's Advocate
Website www.sfuhs.org

San Francisco University High School (familiarly known as UHS or simply "University") is a college preparatory high school located on Jackson Street in the Pacific Heights neighborhood of San Francisco, California. The school was established in 1973.

Mission Statement

"University High School welcomes students of demonstrated motivation and ability to engage in an education that fosters responsibility and the spirited pursuit of knowledge. We are a school where adults believe in the promise of every student, and together we work to build and sustain a community of diverse backgrounds, perspectives, and talents. UHS challenges each individual to live a life of integrity, inquiry, and purpose larger than the self."

Academics

The median GPA at University is 3.54 with a grading scale of A–F, including plus or minus. In order to graduate, students must take two years of art (including the mandatory Western Civilization course in their sophomore year), four years of English, three years of a foreign language (with Mandarin, French, Spanish, and Latin offered), two years of History excluding Western Civilization, three years of Mathematics, and two years of Science in addition to Community Service Learning requirements.[1] In 2012, the school began implementing its mentoring program, which supports ninth-grade students as they navigate their first year of high school.

Tuition

The cost of attendance at University High School for the 2016–2017 school year was $42,850. In 2016-2017, students at University High School received a total of about $2.6 million in financial assistance, with 23% of students receiving financial aid.[2]

Facilities and Campus

The school is made up of four buildings, commonly referred to as Upper, Middle, Lower, and South campuses. Upper and Middle are connected and located between Jackson and Washington streets, while Lower is across the street, between Washington and Clay. South is two blocks farther down, located at Lyon and Sacramento streets.

Upper Campus is the oldest and most historic part of campus. Originally designed by Julia Morgan, it was first used to house the Katherine Delmar Burke School, a girls' school, from the early part of the 20th century until 1975, when the building was sold to the newly created University High School. It houses the History and English Departments, College Counseling offices, and administrative offices. Middle Campus, connected to Upper Campus by a bridge, houses the school library; the 400-seat theater; the student center and cafeteria; state-of-the-art science labs; music rooms; including an electronic music recording room; and the Summerbridge program, UHS's pioneer program to help talented middle school students from local public middle schools get the resources they might not have access to in their own schools. Lower Campus is home to the Math and Science Departments. It also holds the fitness center, changing rooms, gym, and athletic offices. Indoor sports are played at the gym, while field sports are mainly played at fields in the nearby Presidio. South Campus, opened in the 2006–2007 school year, is the home of the Foreign Language Department and the Art Department. Additionally, South Campus contains a language lab, a large photography studio and darkroom, and art studios.

Rankings

In 2013, the Washington Post ranked University the 15th best private high school in a nationwide list of "schools that have done the best job in persuading average students to take college-level courses and tests".[3][4]

Notable Alumni

Graduates in the 37 classes of alumni of University High School have made significant contributions and received recognition for outstanding achievements in a variety of fields, including the performing and visual arts, education, literature, medicine, law, philanthropy, and entrepreneurship. The names below are only a few of the distinguished alumni in 15 different occupational areas to be found in a more up-to-date directory prepared by the UHS Alumni Director on the UHS website, After UHS..

Writers

Professional Athletes

Artists/Musicians

Business


See also

References

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