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Sun Valley High School opened its doors on Wednesday, September 9, 2009 on what was formerly the Richard E. Byrd Middle School campus. Sun Valley High School opened as a secondary school in the Sun Valley area to relieve overcrowding at John H. Francis Polytechnic High School. [2] The school opened in the fall of 2009 to 9th, 10th, and 11th ...
Red Hill Community Park Richard E. Byrd Middle School Sun Valley: 2008 renamed Sun Valley High School after Byrd Relocates to a New Campus near John H. Francis Polytechnic High School. Riverview Union High School [34] Antioch: 1931 Antioch Historical Society Museum Rolling Hills High School: Rolling Hills Estates: 1991
Zoned schools. Elizabeth Learning Center (only K–8 is zoned) (Cudahy, opened 1927); James A. Foshay Learning Center, Exposition Park (only 6–12 is zoned; in order to attend Foshay LC for 9–12, a student has to have been enrolled as an 8th grader) (Los Angeles, opened 1924)
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One of every ten of Sun Valley residents aged 25 and older had earned a four-year degree by 2000, a low percentage for both the city and the county. The percentage of the same-age residents with less than a high school diploma was high for the county. [6] [27] Schools within the Sun Valley boundaries are: [28]
Sun Valley High School (Pennsylvania), Aston, Pennsylvania Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about schools, colleges, or other educational institutions which are associated with the same title.
1902 – Evans School for Boys opens; later renamed Mesa Ranch School; 1908 – Granite Reef Diversion Dam is completed; the Salt River Valley Water Users' Association permanently provides water for irrigation canals in Mesa from this point, replacing the earlier Mormon-lead efforts; 1909 – The original "Old Main" campus of Mesa High School opens
Polytechnic High School opened in 1897 as a "commercial branch" of the only high school at that time in the city, Los Angeles High School.As such, Polytechnic would be the third oldest high school in the city, after Abraham Lincoln High School in Lincoln Heights, (founded in 1878), and the fourth oldest in the LAUSD, after San Fernando High School., which was founded in 1896.