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[60] [66] [67] Monterey High School, a continuation high school, serves the needs of at-risk students in the East Los Angeles community. In 2013 adult education programs from the Eastside Learning Center and East Los Angeles Occupational Center relocated at the East Los Angeles Star Hospital site to form an adult learning center and high school ...
List of school districts in Los Angeles County, ... Glendale Unified School District; ... East Whittier City Elementary School District;
College-Ready Academy High School#4, Los Angeles; College-Ready Academy High School#6, Los Angeles; College-Ready Math-Science School, Los Angeles; Gertz-Ressler Academy High School, Los Angeles; Heritage College-Ready Academy High School, Los Angeles; Huntington Park College-Ready High School, Los Angeles; Richard Merkin Middle Academy, Los ...
Holy Name (Girls), Pomona (Closed 1949) (reopened as Pomona Catholic High School) Los Angeles College, the junior seminary of the archdiocese; Mount Carmel (Closed 1976) Our Lady Queen of Angels, Los Angeles (Closed 1982) Pater Noster, Los Angeles (Closed 1991) Pius X.Downey (merged with St. Mathias 1995) Notre Dame (Girls), Sunland (Closed 1960s)
In 2001, Glendale High School celebrated its centenary. The student population was then 3,500 and there were over 100 teachers. [4] In 2001, the Glendale High School Visual and Performing Arts Program (VAPA) was awarded the BRAVO Award for excellence in arts education by the Los Angeles County Music Center.
John H. Francis Polytechnic High School: Los Angeles: 1957 has moved three times and has changed name once since its creation in 1897; most recent move was from what has become Los Angeles Trade-Technical College: Live Oak High School: Morgan Hill: 1975 Britton Middle School Los Angeles High School: Los Angeles: 1917 now covered by the ...
In the 2008–2009 school year, the district served 26,744 students and expects enrollment to decline 1–2% in each of the next three years. As of 2002, it was the third-largest district in Los Angeles County and among the thirty-largest in the State of California. It is the 254th largest in the nation by student population. [3]
ELAC became the second city college (or junior college) in the Los Angeles area. Formally established by the Los Angeles City Board of Education in June 1945, East Los Angeles College opened for classes on September 4, 1945. It initially operated on the Garfield High School campus with 373 students and a faculty of nineteen, although the school ...