Sacramento City Unified School District (SCUSD) is a public school system in
Sacramento, California. With 47,900 students in 81 schools, it is the eleventh largest school district in California.[2]
Harvey Willson “H.W.” Harkness was elected as the first president of the Sacramento board of education in 1853.[4] In 1854, city commissioners opened Sacramento's first public school, consisting of two grammar schools and a co-ed primary school. In 1856,
Sacramento High School, the city's first high school, opened.[5] It was the second oldest American high school west of the
Mississippi River until closing in 2003.[6] In 1894, the board of education abolished segregated education.[5]
Development
In 2012, voters approved two general obligation bonds,
Measure Q for $346,000,000[7] and Measure R for $68,000,000,[8] to improve district facilities.
Schools
Demographics
The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University conducted for
TIME magazine named Sacramento “America’s Most Diverse City.”[9] Accordingly, SCUSD’s student population is reflected as 36% Hispanic or Latino, 18.3% Asian; 16.3% African American; and 19% white. About 7% of students are of two or more races. Residents within SCUSD speak more than 40 languages; 38% of students do not speak English at home.[2]
Elementary schools
The following is a list of SCUSD elementary schools:[10]
Abraham Lincoln Elementary School
Bowling Green Charter Chacon Language & Science Academy
Bowling Green Charter McCoy Academy
Bret Harte Elementary School
Caleb Greenwood Elementary School
Camellia Basic Elementary School
Caroline Wenzel Elementary School
Cesar E. Chavez Elementary School (4-6th Grade)
Crocker/Riverside Elementary School
David Lubin Elementary School
Earl Warren Elementary School
Edward Kemble Elementary School
Elder Creek Elementary School
Ethel I. Baker Elementary School
Ethel Phillips Elementary School
Father Keith B. Kenney Elementary School
Genevieve Didion Elementary School (K-8)
Golden Empire Elementary School
H.W. Harkness Elementary School
Hollywood Park Elementary School
Hubert H. Bancroft Elementary School
Isador Cohen Elementary School
James W. Marshall Elementary School
John Bidwell Elementary School
John Cabrillo Elementary School
John D. Sloat Basic Elementary School
Leataata Floyd Elementary School
Leonardo da Vinci eK-8 School
Mark Twain Elementary School
Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School
Matsuyama Elementary School
New Joseph Bonnheim Community Charter Elementary School
Nicholas Elementary School
O.W. Erlewine Elementary School
Oak Ridge Elementary School
Pacific Elementary School
Parkway Elementary School
Phoebe Hearst Elementary School
Pony Express Elementary School
Rosa Parks K-8 School
Sequoia Elementary School
Susan B. Anthony Elementary School
Sutterville Elementary School
Suy:u Elementary School
Tahoe Elementary School
Theodore Judah Elementary School
Washington Elementary School
William Land Elementary School
Woodbine Elementary School
Middle schools
The following is a list of SCUSD middle schools:[11]
Albert Einstein Middle School
California Middle School
Fern Bacon Middle School
Genevieve Didion(K-8)
Miwok Middle School
Sam Brannan Middle School
School of Engineering and Sciences Middle & High School
Will C. Wood Middle School
Umoja International Academy Middle School
High schools
The following is a list of SCUSD high schools:[12]
The Sacramento Coalition to Save Public Education was formed by disgruntled parents, educators, and community members to counteract what was perceived as an attack on unionized
public schools and the abrogation of the responsibility of the district to fund education for every child.
Background
The Sacramento City Unified School District (SCUSD) Board of Education, led by Superintendent Jim Sweeney, created several charter schools in the district, the most controversial of which is located on the campus of Sacramento High School.
To create a
charter school at Sacramento High School, the SCUSD Board made the controversial decision to close Sacramento High School. They then issued a charter to St. Hope, a not-for-profit community development corporation founded by former
NBA player
Kevin Johnson. St. Hope opened its charter school on September 2, 2003. Some parents, along with the teachers' union, sued the district because it felt the creation of the charter school was not in compliance with
California state law. The court found that SCUSD indeed violated the charter school law. A consent decree was entered into by the plaintiffs, St. Hope, and SCUSD. and the settlement required that SCUSD create a public high school for the attendance area served by Sacramento High School. To date several unsuccessful attempts have been made to establish a replacement program for Sacramento High school.