Cupertino Union School District
Appearance
(Redirected from Blue Hills Elementary School)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2021) |
Cupertino Union School District | |
---|---|
Address | |
1309 South Mary Avenue
, California, 94087United States | |
District information | |
Grades | K–8[1] |
Superintendent | Stacy Yao |
Schools | 17 elementary (K-5) schools, 5 middle (6-8) schools, and 1 K-8 school [2] |
Budget | ~$185,000,000 annually[3] |
NCES District ID | 0610290 [1] |
Students and staff | |
Students | 15,663 (2020–2021)[1] |
Teachers | 686.09 (FTE)[1] |
Staff | 723.58 (FTE)[1] |
Student–teacher ratio | 22.83:1[1] |
Other information | |
Website | www |
The Cupertino Union School District (abbreviated as CUSD) is a school district in Santa Clara County, California. CUSD's jurisdiction covers the communities of Cupertino, San Jose, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara, Saratoga, and Los Altos. CUSD operates seventeen elementary schools (K-5) and five middle schools (6-8), and one (K-8) school. It is a feeder for the Fremont Union High School District.[2]
Schools
[edit]Colloquial names of schools are in bold.
Elementary schools (K-5)
[edit]- Blue Hills Elementary School, Saratoga.
- L. P. Collins Elementary School, Cupertino.
- Manuel De Vargas Elementary School, San Jose.
- Nelson S. Dilworth Elementary School, San Jose.
- C. B. Eaton Elementary School, Cupertino.
- Dwight D. Eisenhower Elementary School, Santa Clara
- Garden Gate Elementary School, Cupertino.
- Abraham Lincoln Elementary School, Cupertino.
- Montclaire Elementary School, Los Altos.
- John Muir Elementary School, San Jose.
- Chester W. Nimitz Elementary School, Sunnyvale.
- D. J. Sedgwick Elementary School, Cupertino.
- Stevens Creek Elementary School, Cupertino. P
- Louis E. Stocklmeir Elementary School, Sunnyvale.
- West Valley Elementary School, Sunnyvale.
- William Faria A+ Elementary School, Cupertino
- Murdock Portal Elementary School , West San Jose
Middle schools (6-8)
[edit]- Cupertino Middle School, Sunnyvale.
- Warren E. Hyde Middle School, Cupertino.
- John F. Kennedy Middle School, Cupertino.
- Sam H. Lawson Middle School, Cupertino.
- Joaquin Miller Middle School, San Jose.
Alternative program schools
[edit]- Cupertino Language Immersion Program (CLIP), San Jose (K-8; located on the campus of Muir Elementary School for K-5 and on the campus of Miller Middle School for 6-8) [2]
- Christa McAuliffe (Elementary) School, Saratoga (K-8)
- Murdock-Portal (Portal) Elementary School, San Jose (K-5; formerly known as Carol Murdock Elementary School until closed in 1980. Reopened as Murdock-Portal when the Portal Elementary School was closed, and the students and teachers moved to the Murdock location.)
Closed schools
[edit]- Calabazas Creek Elementary (closed after 1974–1975 school year; demolished) [4]
- Doyle School (demolished in 1980; now Barrington Bridge neighborhood)[5]
- C. B. Eaton Elementary School (closed in 1983, later reopened and currently operating) [6]
- Fremont Older Elementary School (closed 1994; demolished, acquired by Cupertino through Measure T along with Black Berry Farm, now Creekside Park) [7][8]
- Grant School (closed 1979, mostly demolished for new homes; a portion is now Grant Park and a few original buildings serve as Grant Park Community Center) [9]
- Hansen Elementary School (closed in 1979; reopened and now Christa McAuliffe School) [10]
- Herbert Hoover Elementary School (closed 1981, demolished; now Hoover Park and accompanying homes) [11]
- Inverness Elementary School (closed 1978, demolished; now part of Sunnyvale Birdlands neighborhood) [12]
- Jollyman Elementary School (closed after 1981–1982 school year; demolished for construction of new houses (Jollyman Park)) [13]
- Luther Elementary School (closed 1982; retained by district as reserve campus; buildings now leased to private schools with attached field serving as a neighborhood park) [14]
- R. I. Meyerholz Elementary School (closed 2022 due to declining enrollment)
- Monta Vista Elementary School (now Monta Vista Park; a few buildings remain and are used by Cupertino as an auxiliary Recreation Center) [15]
- Carol Murdock Elementary School (closed 1980; reopened 1995 when the Portal alternative program was moved, making room for the Collins Elementary transition and build out of Lawson Middle School on the Collins site).[16]
- Nan Allen School (closed; retained by district as reserve campus; now utilized half by district to house the TRC (Teacher Resource Center) and half leased out) [17]
- Ortega Junior High School (facilities merged with adjoining Stocklmeir Elementary School) [18]
- Panama School (closed 1978, demolished; now Panama Park) [19]
- Portal Elementary School, including Nan Allen School on same site (closed 1983, now reopened as Collins Elementary School) [17]
- William Regnart Elementary School (closed 2022 due to declining enrollment)
- San Antonio School (closed 1974 or soon after, now San Antonio Park and South Peninsula Hebrew Day School; one of four original one room school houses in CUSD, later moved to Astoria site in Sunnyvale before closing) [20][21]
- Serra Elementary School (closed 1981; retained by district as reserve campus; buildings now leased to private schools with adjoining park leased to city) [22]
- Laura B. Stichter School (closed after 1977–1978 school year; demolished) [23]
- Earl Warren Elementary School (closed 1975; now Jenny Strand Park, Santa Clara) [24][25]
- Wilson Elementary School (closed 1975, demolished; now Wilson Park) [26]
- Zarevich Site (Prune & Apricot orchard land purchased from Antone Zarevich family. Agricultural land that was purchased for a new school site during enrollment growth, but never developed into school site. Later sold, near current-day Interstate Freeway 280 and Lawrence Expy adjacent to 5301 Stevens Creek/Agilent Campus).[27]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f "Search for Public School Districts – District Detail for Cupertino Union". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
- ^ a b c "Cupertino Union School District".
- ^ "2020-2021 Adoption Budget Financial & SACS Report". CUSD.
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "History of Creekside Park".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ a b "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "San Antonio Original Schoolhouse". 1925.
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "Finding Warren School".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "California Dept. of Ed".
- ^ "Biography of Antone Zarevich of Santa Clara County".
External links
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cupertino Union School District.