Yosemite High School

Yosemite High School is a secondary school in the Yosemite Unified School District in Oakhurst, California. YHS occupies 100 acres (0.40 km2) of rolling, wooded hills and is located within the foothills of California's Sierra Nevada mountains. Yosemite High School is a California Distinguished School. The school opened in September 1976[1] and enrollment in 2014–15 was approximately 700 students.[2]

Campus

Yosemite High School (YHS) is located in the Sierra Nevada foothills in the rural community of Oakhurst, 12 miles (19 km) from the south entrance to Yosemite National Park in Central California. The campus is on a 100-acre (40 ha) site with pines, oaks, and seasonal streams with views of the High Sierra.

Academics

The school features an International Baccalaureate (IB) program that involves over 40% of its students. YHS is one of only 47 IB schools in California. YHS also offers Advanced Placement courses.

In addition to a rigorous academic program, YHS also provides a comprehensive vocational program, which includes technology training in computer networking and multi-media production.

Title I programs, Math and Language Labs provide students with assistance in passing proficiency exams.

A survey of graduates showed that 50% of YHS students completed courses to qualify for the University of California or California State University systems, 50% planned to attend a two-year college, 27% planned to attend a four-year college, 3% were going into a vocational program, 17% planned to enter the work force, and 3% were joining the military. In the third statewide administration of the STAR test in 2000, YHS students earned an API rating of 742, ranking 9 on a scale of 10 for the State. 2000 SAT and ACT scores for YHS students were slightly higher than the state and national averages.

Test Scores and Honors

YHS was named a California Distinguished School in 2001 and 2005. Its 2005 Academic Performance Index (API) score was over 9000, which places it in the upper tier of California high schools. At least one alumnus has been awarded the Rhodes Scholarship.

Student Demographics

The ethnic breakdown of the student population at YHS is 84.3% White, 8.2% Hispanic, 6.2% Native American, 0.5% Asian, 0.5% African-American, and 0.1% Pacific Islander. Approximately ten percent of the students receive free and reduced meals and five percent of the students are from families receiving AFDC.

Accreditation

The school has received a Western Association of Schools and Colleges six-year accreditation.

Feeder Schools

Yosemite has nine major feeder schools, of which eight are elementary schools and one is a middle school:

Extra-curricular activities

Academic competitions

YHS teams often excel in the Academic Decathlon (AD) competition, having won sixteen consecutive Madera County titles as of 2009, in addition to having taken first place twice in 2000 and 2001 and second place at the state level multiple times, most recently in 2006 and 2007.[3]

Music Department

Yosemite High School's Music Department consists of two choirs, two bands and two percussion classes. During football and basketball season the Advanced Percussion, Concert Band, and Wind Ensemble combine to form a pep band. In the spring the bands perform at CMEA (California Music Educators Association) Festivals and the Heritage Festivals in Anaheim, California.

California Cadet Corps

Yosemite is also the home to one of the most distinguished units in the California Cadet Corps, the 66th Battalion. (Badger Battalion)

Units

-Alpha Company, 66th Battalion (5-1)

-Bravo Company, 66th Battalion (5-2)

-YHS is also the site of Headquarters, 5th Brigade. (5th Brigade encompasses Fresno and the surrounding area.)

Athletics

Yosemite fields interscholastic teams in seventeen sports. It is a member of the North Sequoia League in the Central Section of the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF). The girls basketball team, won its fourth consecutive section title in March 2007.

Controversial teaching methods

When the school originally opened, its unorthodox education methods raised concerns. Students (referred to as “learners”) chose their own classes, handled their own attendance, and gave themselves their grades, much to the chagrin of parents, who “…were worried that the students [were] running the school and that there [was] a lack of supervised instruction…”

Teachers (referred to as “learning facilitators”) were also given free-rein with the classes they taught, resulting in such classes as skateboarding and rock climbing. They taught in a single large building with simultaneous classes operating without walls, leading to a good deal of confusion and distraction. Although 6-foot (1.8 m) tall partitions were soon set up, they did little to reduce the noise.

In recent years, YHS has returned to more traditional academic practices, including fixed schedules, standard classrooms, state-mandated coursework and grading criteria, and referring to "teachers" and "students."

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Buddy Cudd & YHS:". Sierra Star. 2000. Archived from the original on March 12, 2016.
  2. "Yosemite High Overview". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  3. "Academic Decathlon results". The Fresno Bee. February 7, 2009.
  4. "YHS drama to present "The Crucible"". Sierra Star. November 1, 2002. Archived from the original on March 11, 2016.

Coordinates: 37°19′43.9″N 119°37′53.99″W / 37.328861°N 119.6316639°W / 37.328861; -119.6316639

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