Herbert Hoover High School (Glendale)

For other high schools named after Herbert Hoover, see Herbert Hoover High School (disambiguation).
Herbert Hoover High School
Location
651 Glenwood Rd., Glendale, CA 91202
Coordinates 34°09′57″N 118°16′14″W / 34.165791°N 118.270510°W / 34.165791; -118.270510Coordinates: 34°09′57″N 118°16′14″W / 34.165791°N 118.270510°W / 34.165791; -118.270510
Information
Type Public
Established 1929
School district Glendale Unified School District
Principal Dr. Jennifer Earl
Number of students 2,097
Color(s)           Purple and white
Athletics conference CIF Southern Section Pacific League
Mascot Tornado
Website www.hooverhs.org

Herbert Hoover High School is a public high school in Glendale, California, USA. The school's colors are purple and white.

The school is named after Herbert Hoover, the 31st president of the United States and is located on a 18.6 acres (75,000 m2) campus.[1]

Hoover High School is part of a neighborhood cluster that includes Mark Keppel Elementary School and Toll Middle School. Today Hoover High School has approximately 2,097 students which includes a wide range of socio-economic, educationa, and cultural backgrounds. 47% of the students are Caucasian; 29.6% Hispanic 5.0% Asian; 9.7% Filipino; 9% African-American; and 0.2% other.

History

The school's original campus, on Glenwood Road, opened in 1929. Named after Herbert Hoover,[2] the school was built to serve the northern foothill area of Glendale, which had experienced a lot of development in the 1920s.[3] The first issue of the school yearbook, Scoll, included copies of letters written by Hoover and his wife, Lou. The school dedicated that issue to Hoover.[2]

The original campus, with the exception of the auditorium and physical education facilities, was demolished in 1966 being replaced by a new facility which was completed in 1969. In 1990, due to continual and anticipated growth in the number of students entering Hoover, a 33-classroom facility was built and completed in 1992.[1]

In 2001, Hoover High School met its school wide Academic Performance Index (API) and has received over $150,000 in Governor's Incentive Award money. For the past two years, 40% of the graduating seniors planned to attend a four-year college. Some 44.4% of graduating seniors meet the University of California A-G requirements. The Hoover staff is keenly focused on standards-based instruction and consistently uses data to chart and plan for improvement. Hoover High School offers 22 different Advanced Placement (AP) classes which span a wide variety of disciplines including history, English language and literature, science, foreign language, math, economics, art, psychology, music theory and computer programming.

In 2010, Hoover High School met its school wide API target with an overall API of 772; an eleven-point gain over 2009. Hoover's API has grown 158 points in the last 10 years. Hoover is determined to reach an API of 800 by 2013, the target for all schools in California. Fifty students earned recognition from the College Board as "AP Scholars". Another 15 earned the "AP Scholar with Honor" designation and 20 students earned the honor of "AP Scholar with Distinction." In 2013, Hoover started offering one AP class for 9th graders for human geography, being one of the first high schools to do so.

Demographics

As of 2010, almost 60% of the students are of Armenian descent, and 25% were Hispanic and Latino. Glendale California has the largest population of Armenians not in Armenia or Russia.[4]

Academics

In fall 2015 the school's automotive program was re-established with support from car dealerships on Brand Boulevard of Cars.[5]

Student discipline and culture

In 2010 Kevin Welsh, the outgoing principal who was nicknamed "Baron Welshian", stated that there were frequent racial tensions between Armenian and Hispanic/Latino students.[4] In 2000 Jefferey Gettleman and Lee Condon of the Los Angeles Times reported that in the event of disputes between Armenians and Latinos, people take racial lines, and that the groups do not often socially mingle. According to Gettleman and Condon, recent graduates and current students of the school characterized it as "polarized" between Latinos and Armenians.[6] Tensions between Armenians and Latinos had occurred in other parts of the Los Angeles area.[4]

Two violent incidents involving Hoover students were a 1998 shooting of Avetis “Avo” Demirchyan, involving in a dispute between Armenians; and the 2000 stabbing of 12th grade student Raul Aguirre, who attempted to intervene between Armenian and Hispanic gangs but who was not a gang member himself. Both incidents did not occur on campus, but Welsh stated that they damaged the school's reputation.[4] The Aguirre incident was the first death related to Latino-Armenian tensions.[6]

Athletics

Hoover High School provides a wide variety of sports to students including boys' water polo (3rd place, 2008-2009 season and again 2009-2010 season and reached CIF division VI quarterfinals) and girls' water polo, boys' and girls' volleyball, boys' and girls' soccer (2006-2007 league champions), boys' and girls' basketball, boys' American football (girls are also welcome), baseball, softball, track, cross country, golf, pep squad, swimming and wrestling.

The 1975 baseball team won the CIF 4A Championship defeating Lakewood High 2-1 at Dodger Stadium.

A significant aspect of the school's history is the long running cross-town rivalry with Glendale High School. "BGD" known as "Big Game Day" or "Beat Glendale Day" is the biggest social/athletic event of the school year. Even though every sport has its own "BGD" game, American football is the biggest of them all. On the day of the big football game, the school provides events such as "The Poster Drop", which is a competition for every grade (9-12) taking place on the Friday morning of the game, and spirit assemblies. The game usually takes place at Glendale High School because Hoover High School does not have a "proper" field.

The school's mascot, "The Tornadoes", was temporarily changed in the past to the "Wind Gusts" when a Kansas team whose town had just been ravaged by tornadoes came to visit.

Vic Francy, who had coached the Hoover track teams for 27 years, had previously assisted the 1924-1925 Glendale High School football team while he was a University of Southern California student.[7]

The school also includes a wrestling team. The number of participants declined in 2014, but coach Dave Beard stated that the students who remained were more committed.[8]

In 2015 the school marching band won its first California State Band Championship.[9]

Miscellaneous activities

BETA
Beta is a business academic program for which students must process an application if they are interested in the program. Those who are accepted are required to take at least five semesters of classes that include business technology, keyboarding, virtual enterprise and introduction to business.

Fine Arts Academy
Students are nominated to the Hoover High School Fine Arts Academy. Academy students are invited to take advanced classes at Hoover to create a fine arts emphasis in their degree program. Students must take three years of arts classes while enrolled at Hoover in order to be considered an Academy graduate. Of these three courses, at least two must be at Hoover. Along with the academic distinction that comes with being part of the Academy, students are eligible to participate in events at the Hoover Arts Gallery.

Jazz Ensemble
Students audition to play in the Hoover High School Studio Jazz Orchestra, the flagship performing group at Hoover. All instrumentalists are welcome. Trumpets, trombones, and saxophones participate as well as flutes, clarinets, violins, cellos and, at one point, a bassoon and a harp. Jazz students play a variety of music styles, including swing, Latin jazz, Afro-Cuban, reggae, jazz-rock fusion, pop and jump-swing. The Studio Jazz Orchestra has received more major awards than any other comprehensive high school jazz group in the country.

Notable former students

References

  1. 1 2 "History/Info / History and Info". www.hooverhs.org. Retrieved 2016-02-03.
  2. 1 2 Arroyo, Juliet M., Katherine Peters Yamada, and George Ellison. Glendale (Postcard history series). Arcadia Publishing, 2007. ISBN 0738547654, 9780738547657. p. 26.
  3. Arroyo, Juliet M. Early Glendale (Images of America). Arcadia Publishing, 2005. ISBN 0738529907, 9780738529905. p. 104.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Aghajanian, Liana. "Culture Clash: Armenian and Hispanic Relations in the Past, Present and Future" (Archive). Ararat Quarterly. July 6, 2010. Retrieved on January 5, 2016.
  5. Corrigan, Kelly. "Hoover High's auto program receives boost from Glendale dealerships." Glendale News-Press. December 17, 2015. Retrieved on January 18, 2016.
  6. 1 2 "Glendale Shaken by Slaying of Student." Los Angeles Times. May 7, 2000. Retrieved on January 18, 2016.
  7. Shepherd, Donald, Robert Slatzer, and Dave Grayson. Duke: The Life and Times of John Wayne. Citadel Press, 2002. ISBN 0806523409, 9780806523408. p. 49.
  8. Campa, Andrew J. "Hoover High wrestling leaner, more focused this season." Los Angeles Times. December 5, 2014. Retrieved on January 18, 2016.
  9. Corrigan, Kelly. "Hoover High Tornado Marching Band wins state championship." Glendale News-Press. November 27, 2015. Retrieved on January 18, 2016.

External links

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