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Norma Coombs Elementary School began as Pasadena Alternative School (PAS), which was a cooperative venture by the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the school district, established to answer the community's desire for a school that offered a more unstructured approach to education. The original PAS was founded in 1972.
In 2012, Schoology raised $6 million in a round led by Firstmark Capital; in 2014, Schoology raised $15 million in a funding round led by Intel Capital; [2] [3] in November 2015, Schoology raised $32 million in a funding round, led by JMI Equity. [4] In November 2013, Schoology had over 7.5 million users across about 60,000 schools. [5]
Since 1989, Pasadena Unified has closed 11 schools as of 2020 due to declining enrollment. Pasadena's peak enrollment was 23,559 pupils in 2000. [21] As of the 2023–2024 academic year, district enrollment is 14,404. [22] Current projections estimate that enrollment will decline to approximately 10,246 by 2029–2030. Before 1989
Westridge founder Mary Lowther Ranney (1871-1939) moved to Pasadena in 1904 when she was 34 years old. A trained architect and educator, she had graduated from Kemper Hall Academy in Kenosha, Wisconsin, attended classes at the newly established University of Chicago, and taught at the University School for Girls in Chicago.
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Pasadena Independent School District (Texas) 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.
The high school is located on the Dean A. and Janice E. Scarborough Campus (108 Waverly Drive, Pasadena, California), a facility consisting of refurbished houses built before 1940. The Pasadena Historical Society helped to fund the moving of three buildings from their original site so that the buildings could be preserved and put to use.
It was established on March 26, 1898. [7]According to a report around November 2, 2004, by the Texas Education Agency, among the 30 largest school districts in the state, Pasadena ISD was the 8th fastest-growing district in Texas by population; [8] [9] much of the growth occurred in the "South Belt" area along Beltway 8.