Monterey Trail High School

Monterey Trail High School

"Building a Future, Finding a Way"
Address
8661 Power Inn Road
Elk Grove, California 95624
United States
Coordinates 38°26′58″N 121°23′54″W / 38.44941°N 121.39833°W / 38.44941; -121.39833Coordinates: 38°26′58″N 121°23′54″W / 38.44941°N 121.39833°W / 38.44941; -121.39833
Information
Established 2004
School district Elk Grove Unified School District
Color(s)          
Mascot Mustang
Team name Mustangs
Rival Florin High School & Sheldon High School (Sacramento, California)
Feeder schools Edward Harris Jr. Middle School
Website Official website

Monterey Trail High School (MTHS or MT) is a 9th-12th grade college preparatory high school located in Elk Grove, California. The school was established in the first decade of the 21st century as part of the Elk Grove Unified School District.

History

Monterey Trail High School is named after its location on the Monterey Trail of the 19th century, located just south of Elk Grove, which was used by travelers of the time to travel to Monterey, the capital of both Spanish and Mexican California. Home of the Mustangs.

The school color of forest green is based on the abundant amount of trees along the areas of Elk Grove, Laguna Creek, and Franklin. The second school color of gold is based on the Monterey Trail becoming well-traveled after the discovery of gold. The school mascot, the Mustang, is based on the horses that travelers rode while traveling the Monterey Trail in the 19th century.[1]

Campus

Monterey Trail High School is located southeast of Calvine Road and Highway 99. The campus consists of 14 buildings, each grouped by academic subject. The exception is the portables, which provide extra classroom space for all academic subjects, such as foreign language, math, social studies, and electives.

Monterey Trail High School and Edward Harris, Jr. Middle School share a private library located between the two campuses.

Mark Macres Memorial Stadium

Mark Macres Memorial Stadium marker

After Vice Principal Mark Macres died from cancer in the spring of 2007, the campus football stadium was dedicated to his name on October 26, 2007. As he was a vice principal at Florin High School before Monterey Trail High School, students and staff from both Monterey Trail High School and Florin High School as well as EGUSD dignitaries were invited to the dedication ceremony.[2]

Academics

As of 2007-2008, Monterey Trail High School scored a 719 (out of 1000) on the Academic Performance Index (API), ranking fifth in the state and eighth in similar schools. The school also meets the Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) requirements mandated by the No Child Left Behind Act. It uses block schedules for its academic scheduling.

Monterey Trail High School has a Design and Technology Academy (DATA), designed to provide students with career technical skills in the areas of Engineering, Computer Science, and Environmental Architecture. DATA is a California Partnership Academy.

The school also offers a Regional Occupation Program (ROP) in Virtual Enterprise, which provides skills to seek lifelong employment.

Advanced Placement Courses Offered:

Monterey Trail High School has received full WASC accreditation. As of 2007-2008, the graduation rate of Monterey Trail High School is 95.3% of students.[3]

Athletics

Fourteen sports are played at Monterey Trail High School, with many divided into Varsity and JV teams. Although there is no pool on campus, practices for water sports are held at the pool of the nearby Cosumnes River College.

Season Sport Participating Gender
Fall Cross Country Co-Ed
Golf Women's
Football Men's
Soccer Men's
Tennis Women's
Volleyball Women's
Water Polo Co-Ed
Fall and Winter Sports Cheer Co-Ed
Winter Sports Basketball Men's and Women's
Wrestling Co-Ed
Spring Sports Baseball Men's
Golf Men's
Soccer Women's
Softball Women's
Swimming Co-Ed
Tennis Men's
Track & Field Co-Ed
Volleyball Men's

Visual and performing arts

Monterey Trail High School offers visual arts classes in photography, art, ceramics, digital art, and mixed media. The projects made in these classes are displayed throughout the school, namely in the halls of the HF complex and the school library.

It also offers performing arts classes in dance, band, theater, and choir. The Performing Arts division of the VAPA department often participate in school rallies, school sports events, perform competitively against other schools and groups, or hold their own performances in the Black Box Theater.

Student life

2,183 students attend Monterey Trail High School. As of 2014, the school has 302 English Learners, 143 GATE students, and 1,342 students of poverty.[3]

The student diversity in 2014 was:

Monterey Trail High School's student news publication, Voices from the Trail, can be found at www.voicesfromthetrail.com.

Student government

Each grade level and ASB Leadership has its own student council, composed of a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, and historian. With over fifty members, ASB Leadership organizes most of Monterey Trail High School's events, including rallies, assemblies, food faires, and lunch activities. In Link Crew, upperclassmen support incoming freshmen in adjusting to high school.

Elections are held each February for student councils.

Clubs

There are over 40 clubs and organizations on campus, including MTHS Robotics Club, MTHS Video Game Club, Key Club (of which Monterey Trail High School is part of Division 7 South), Gay-Straight Alliance, Academic Decathlon, California Scholarship Federation, National Honor Society, Mathletes, the Debate Team, and the online-student publication Voices from the Trail.

Other clubs are geared towards subjects such as student religion, student ethnicity, chess, music, dance, theater, language, fashion, environmental awareness, and community service.

School highlights and awards

References

  1. "History of Monterey Trail" (PDF). Elizabeth Pinkerton for the School Names Committee. Retrieved 2009-06-21.
  2. "Football stadium to be named in memory of Mark Macres". California Dept. of Education. Retrieved 2009-06-21.
  3. 1 2 "2008-2009 School Accountability Report Card - Executive Summary" (PDF). EGUSD Board of Education. Retrieved 2009-06-21.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.